Abstract
The objective of the study was to examine whether disease duration independently predicts treatment response among biologic-naïve patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) initiating abatacept in clinical practice. Using the Corrona RA registry (February 2006–January 2015), biologic-naïve patients with RA initiating abatacept with 12-month (±3 months) follow-up and assessment of disease activity (Clinical Disease Activity Index [CDAI]) at initiation and at 12 months were identified. The primary outcome was mean change in CDAI (ΔCDAI) from baseline to 12 months. Secondary outcomes at 12 months included achievement of low disease activity (LDA; CDAI ≤10 in patients with moderate/high disease activity at initiation) and remission (CDAI ≤2.8 in patients with low, moderate or high disease activity at initiation). Linear and logistic regression analyses were performed to examine the relationship between disease duration and response to abatacept. There were 281 biologic-naïve patients with RA initiating abatacept (disease duration 0–2 years, n = 107; 3–5 years, n = 45; 6–10 years, n = 50; >10 years, n = 79). Increased disease duration was associated with older age (p = 0.047), and the median number of prior conventional disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs used was lowest in the 0- to 2-year duration group (p < 0.001). Mean ΔCDAI (SE) ranged from −10.22 (1.19) for 0–2 years to −4.63 (1.38) for >10 years. In adjusted analyses, shorter disease duration was significantly associated with greater mean ΔCDAI (p = 0.015) and greater likelihood of achieving LDA (p = 0.048). In biologic-naïve patients with RA initiating abatacept, earlier disease (shorter disease duration) was associated with greater ΔCDAI and likelihood of achieving LDA.
Highlights
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic, debilitating, progressive, inflammatory disease characterized by joint inflammation, which can lead to structural damage [1]
There were a total of 281 abatacept initiators who were biologic naïve and met the inclusion criteria
Unadjusted response rates for low disease activity (LDA) and remission were similar between disease duration groups
Summary
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic, debilitating, progressive, inflammatory disease characterized by joint inflammation, which can lead to structural damage [1]. The treat-to-target paradigm is being widely advocated, treatment acceleration in patients with active disease. It has been postulated that there is a ‘window of opportunity’ in early RA, during which treatment could alter the disease course before the inflammatory and autoimmune processes become established, irreversible damage has occurred and patients become increasingly refractory to treatment [3, 4]. Supporting this theory, patients with RA of longer disease duration generally do not respond as well to treatment with a biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic
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