Low Hemoglobin and Radiographic Damage Progression in Early Rheumatoid Arthritis: Secondary Analysis From a Phase III Trial.

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Categoría Estudio primario
RevistaArthritis care & research
Año 2018

Este artículo está incluido en 1 Revisión sistemática Revisiones sistemáticas (1 referencia)

Este artículo es parte de los siguientes hilos de publicación
  • PREMIER - DE013 [The Prospective Multi-Centre Randomised, Double-Blind, Active Comparator-Controlled, Parallel-Groups Study Comparing the Fully Human Monoclonal Anti-TNFα Antibody Adalimumab Given Every Second Week With Methotrexate Given Weekly and the Combination of Adalimumab and Methotrexate Administered Over 2 Years in Patients With Early Rheumatoid Arthritis] (14 documentos)
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OBJECTIVE:

To study low blood hemoglobin concentrations as a predictor of radiographic damage progression in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA).

METHODS:

Post hoc analyses were performed in patients from the PREMIER trial with early RA undergoing 2 years of adalimumab (ADA), methotrexate (MTX), or ADA + MTX combination therapy. Low disease activity was defined as a score <3.2 on the 28-joint Disease Activity Score using the C-reactive protein level (DAS28-CRP), and clinical response by the American College of Rheumatology criteria for 20% improvement at week 24. Baseline or mean hemoglobin concentrations over time, or anemia as defined using sex-specific World Health Organization criteria, were analyzed in mixed-effects models for longitudinal data in men and women as predictors of progressive joint damage, as measured by the modified total Sharp/van der Heijde score (ΔSHS). Data were adjusted for treatment and other patient characteristics, including the DAS28-CRP.

RESULTS:

Baseline hemoglobin was inversely associated with ΔSHS in adjusted analyses (P < 0.05 for both sexes). Baseline anemia predicted greater ΔSHS in MTX-treated patients over 104 weeks, and in ADA- and combination-treated patients over 26 weeks. Lower hemoglobin concentrations over time, as well as time with anemia, were associated with greater damage progression (P < 0.001). The effect of low hemoglobin concentrations on joint damage progression remained significant, even in patients achieving low disease activity.

CONCLUSION:

Low hemoglobin is a DAS28-CRP-independent predictor of radiographic joint damage progression in MTX-treated patients with early RA. This effect decreases over time in ADA- and combination-treated patients, and in clinical responders irrespective of treatment modality.
Epistemonikos ID: ab7398d180305f83cdf10bc8704f8c75e0d88ff0
First added on: Feb 01, 2019