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Comparison of treatment strategies in early rheumatoid arthritis - A randomized trial

Authors :
J. A. P. M. Ewals
Pit J S M Kerstens
Ferdinand C. Breedveld
Cornelia F Allaart
Wim M. de Beus
Yvonne P M Goekoop-Ruiterman
A. H. Zwinderman
Peter B J de Sonnaville
Derkjen van Zeben
Jeska K de Vries-Bouwstra
J. Mieke W. Hazes
Johanna M. de Jonge-Bok
André Peeters
Ben A. C. Dijkmans
Constant Mallée
Rheumatology
General Practice
APH - Amsterdam Public Health
Epidemiology and Data Science
Source :
Annals of Internal Medicine, 146(6), 406-415. American College of Physicians, Annals of internal medicine, 146(6), 406-415. American College of Physicians
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Background In patients with early rheumatoid arthritis, initial combination therapies provide earlier clinical improvement and less progression of joint damage after 1 year compared with initial monotherapies (as demonstrated in the BeSt study). Objective To evaluate whether the initial clinical and radiographic efficacy of combination therapies could be maintained during the second year of follow-up in patients with early rheumatoid arthritis. Design Randomized, controlled clinical trial with blinded assessors. Setting 18 peripheral and 2 university medical centers in the Netherlands. Patients 508 patients with early active rheumatoid arthritis. Intervention Sequential monotherapy (group 1), step-up combination therapy (group 2), initial combination therapy with tapered high-dose prednisone (group 3), or initial combination therapy with infliximab (group 4). Trimonthly treatment adjustments were made to achieve low disease activity. Measurements Primary end points were functional ability (Health Assessment Questionnaire) and Sharp-van der Heijde score for radiographic joint damage. Results Groups 3 and 4 had more rapid clinical improvement during the first year; all groups improved further to a mean functional ability score of 0.6 (overall, P = 0.257) and 42% were in remission (overall, P = 0.690) during the second year. Progression of joint damage remained better suppressed in groups 3 and 4 (median scores of 2.0, 2.0, 1.0, and 1.0 in groups 1, 2, 3, and 4, respectively [P = 0.004]). After 2 years, 33%, 31%, 36%, and 53% of patients in groups 1 through 4, respectively, were receiving single-drug therapy for initial treatment. There were no significant differences in toxicity. Limitations Patients and physicians were aware of the allocated group, and the assessors were blinded. Conclusions Currently available antirheumatic drugs can be highly effective in patients with early rheumatoid arthritis in a setting of tight disease control. Initial combination therapies seem to provide earlier clinical improvement and less progression of joint damage, but all treatment strategies eventually showed similar clinical improvements. In addition, combination therapy can be withdrawn successfully and less treatment adjustments are needed than with initial monotherapies.

Details

ISSN :
00034819
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of Internal Medicine, 146(6), 406-415. American College of Physicians, Annals of internal medicine, 146(6), 406-415. American College of Physicians
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f3f302d6fe539fc390c1f204758d66cd