Abstract

ObjectivesTo assess whether modern management of RA has reduced the prescription of oral corticosteroids and NSAIDs and to evaluate use of pharmacological prophylaxis strategies.MethodsUsing the Clinical Practice Research Datalink, we explored long-term (≥3/12 months; ≥6/12 in sub-analyses) DMARD, corticosteroid and NSAID prescribing (annually, in the year post-diagnosis and across the patient’s life course to 15 years post-diagnosis), annual proportion with co-prescribing for prophylaxis of associated bone (corticosteroids, women only) and gastrointestinal (NSAIDs) comorbidity.ResultsReported incidence of RA was 5.98 (0.37) per 10 000 person-years and prevalence was 0.91% (0.014) in 2017. In 71 411 RA patients, long-term DMARD prescribing initially rose post-diagnosis from 41.6% in 1998 to 67.9% in 2009. Corticosteroid prescribing changed little, overall [22.2% in 1998, 19.1% in 2016; incident risk ratio (IRR) 0.92, 95% CI: 0.82, 1.03] and across the life course from the first to fifteenth year (22.2% to 16.9%). NSAID prescribing declined from 57.7% in 1998, and significantly so from 2008, to 27.1% in 2016 (IRR 0.50, 95% CI: 0.44, 0.56). This continued across the life course (41.2% to 28.4%). Bone prophylaxis increased to 68.1% in 2008 before declining to 56.4% in 2017; gastrointestinal prophylaxis increased from 11.5% in 1998 to 62.6% in 2017. Sub-analyses showed consistent patterns.ConclusionDespite modern treatment strategies, corticosteroid prescribing in RA patients remains substantial and persists beyond 6 months once initiated. Rheumatologists need to determine causes and develop strategies to reduce corticosteroid use to minimize adverse event occurrence.

Highlights

  • Modern treatment strategies for RA employ early initiation of disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (DMARDs) and short-term concomitant corticosteroids to suppress inflammation, with NSAIDs offering symptomatic relief [1]

  • We investigated trends in the pharmacological management of RA over 20 years to determine whether modern use of DMARDs and tight control of inflammation has resulted in less long-term use of corticosteroids and NSAIDs

  • We identified 71 411 RA patients (44 426 with 2 diagnoses; 45 438 with diagnosis and prescribed DMARD) of which 41 198 were matched to 205 990 non-RA patients (Supplementary Fig. S1, available at Rheumatology online)

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Summary

Introduction

Modern treatment strategies for RA employ early initiation of disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (DMARDs) and short-term concomitant corticosteroids to suppress inflammation (especially in early RA), with NSAIDs offering symptomatic relief [1]. These strategies control inflammation through a treat-to-target approach, which is associated with improved patient outcomes [2].

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