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Five-year treat-to-target outcomes after methotrexate induction therapy with or without other csDMARDs and temporary glucocorticoids for rheumatoid arthritis in the CareRA trial

Authors :
Veerle Stouten
Kristien Van der Elst
Rene Westhovens
Johan Joly
Diederik De Cock
D. Bertrand
S. Pazmino
Patrick Verschueren
Public Health Sciences
Source :
Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases. 80:965-973
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
BMJ, 2021.

Abstract

ObjectivesTo compare outcomes of different treatment schedules from the care in early rheumatoid arthritis (CareRA) trial over 5 years.MethodsPatients with RA completing the 2-year CareRA randomised controlled trial were eligible for the 3-year observational CareRA-plus study. 5-year outcomes after randomisation to initial methotrexate (MTX) monotherapy with glucocorticoid bridging (COBRA-Slim) were compared with MTX step-up without glucocorticoids or conventional synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (DMARD) combinations with glucocorticoid bridging, per prognostic patient group. Disease activity (Disease Activity Score based on 28 joints calculated with C reactive protein (DAS28-CRP)) and functionality (Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ)) were compared between treatment arms using longitudinal models; safety and drug use were detailed.ResultsOf 322 eligible patients, 252 (78%) entered CareRA-plus, of which 203 (81%) completed the study. Treatments for high-risk patients resulted in comparable DAS28-CRP (p=0.539) and HAQ scores over 5 years (p=0.374). Low-risk patients starting COBRA-Slim had lower DAS28-CRP (p3 months and 17% for >6 months outside the bridging period.ConclusionsAll intensive treatments with glucocorticoids bridging demonstrated excellent 5 year outcomes. Initiating COBRA-Slim was comparably effective as more complex treatments for high-risk patients with early RA and more effective than initial MTX monotherapy for low-risk patients with limited need for biologics and chronic glucocorticoid use.

Details

ISSN :
14682060 and 00034967
Volume :
80
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....80a63c43f5493a4c405920c85cfafb11
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/annrheumdis-2020-219825