November 17, 2016
“This is a subset of the RA population that we should probably give intensive treatment to,” Dr. Harrold says of RA patients diagnosed with certain prognosis factors. “Not only clinical adverse sequelae, but also in their social environment, like being able to work or function”.
Since its inception in 2001, the CorEvitas RA Registry has grown to become the largest prospective rheumatoid arthritis (RA) study in the world, with over 40,000 patients enrolled. It is used as the foundation of countless research efforts on the prevalence and treatment of the painful rheumatic condition. At the 2016 American College of Rheumatology Annual Meeting in Washington, DC, Leslie Harrold, MD, was on hand to present the findings of a few of these new studies. Harrold is a Senior Medical Director of Pharmacoepidemiology and Outcomes Research for the CorEvitas Registry.
Dr. Harrold’s team displayed a number of posters at the Meeting. A pair of them examined challenges and outcomes for RA patients with poor prognosis factors. “There hasn’t been a lot of work on poor prognosis,” she told MD Magazine in an interview, “What we chose to use were the poor prognosis characteristics that were included in the 2008 RA treatment recommendations put out by the American College of Rheumatology. They suggested you alter your treatment based on these characteristics.”
The poor prognosis factors her team examined were functional status, or how well an RA patient can function in daily life; seropositivity; x-rays that showed erosive disease; and extra-articular manifestations, such as RA lung disease/nodules or Sjögren’s syndrome.
One of the two examined if the presence of such factors in patients had an impact on their physicians’ treatment decisions. Out of a cohort of 3,621 patients with RA who were biologic naïve, they found that 42.9% had 0 or 1 poor prognosis factors, meaning the majority in the study had multiple. 34.9% displayed 2 factors, while 22.2% showed 3 or more. One outcome in they examined was the initiation of treatment with any disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (DMARD) and change in disease activity based on clinical disease activity index (CDAI)
“In 2008 the ACR did tell rheumatologists they need to consider poor prognostic factors when discussing patients’ treatment regimens. In the subsequent ACR treatment guidelines, they took that out,” she says, “So we did analysis to see if physicians are using poor prognosis factors to determine whether they initiate a biologic or change any therapy to accelerate care.”
When adjusting for baseline CDAI scores and disease factors, there was no significant relationship between poor prognosis and new DMARD use.
“We found that, no, physicians aren’t taking into account poor prognoses when making treatment decisions. We also looked at one-year outcomes in those who had poor prognoses and found that they did worse, they had diminished change in disease activity scores,” Harrold explains.
Another poster detailed a preliminary work that used the same patient group to examine how their prognosis factors impacted their work status. Those with 0 or 1 poor prognosis factors were the most likely to be employed, whether full or part-time, and were at the 1-year follow-up point, though rates for all three categories dropped over the course of that year.
“It really suggests that we should focus in on those with poor prognosis and see if we can do things to prevent them from being unemployed, or unable to work,” says Harrold of this examination. “This is a subset of the RA population that we should probably give intensive treatment to, to prevent those adverse sequelae. Not only clinical adverse sequelae, but also in their social environment, like being able to work or function.”
For Dr. Harrold, these findings underscore a need for increasingly close and collaborative treatment of patients, with an emphasis on the individual characteristics that make each RA case uniquely challenging.
“I’m very passionate about rheumatology because we have the ability to care for patients over the long term. We really are partners in their care, we walk the journey with them,” she says. “Some patients we can heal, some we can’t, but we’re always there to work with them and try to give them the best care and the best quality of life. I think we really are trying to be partners with them and work collaboratively so they can have the best care and the best outcomes possible.”