Abstract

To investigate whether an ultrasound-guided treat-to-target strategy for early RA would lead to reduced MRI inflammation or less structural damage progression compared with a conventional treat-to-target strategy. A total of 230 DMARD-naïve early RA patients were randomized to an ultrasound tight control strategy targeting DAS <1.6, no swollen joints and no power Doppler signal in any joint or a conventional strategy targeting DAS <1.6 and no swollen joints. Patients in both arms were treated according to the same DMARD escalation strategy. MRI of the dominant hand was performed at six time points over 2 years and scored according to the OMERACT RA MRI scoring system. A total of 218 patients had baseline and one or more follow-up MRIs and were included in the analysis. The mean MRI score change from baseline to each follow-up and the 2 year risk for erosive progression were compared between arms. MRI bone marrow oedema, synovitis and tenosynovitis improved over the first year and was sustained during the second year of follow-up, with no statistically significant differences between the ultrasound and the conventional arms at any time point. The 2 year risk for progression of MRI erosions was similar in both treatment arms: ultrasound arm 39%, conventional arm 33% [relative risk 1.16 (95% CI 0.81, 1.66), P = 0.40]. Incorporating ultrasound information in treatment decisions did not lead to reduced MRI inflammation or less structural damage compared with a conventional treatment strategy. The findings support that systematic use of ultrasound does not provide a benefit in the follow-up of patients with early RA. Clinicaltrials.gov, http://clinicaltrials.gov, NCT01205854.

Highlights

  • Clinical remission is the preferred treatment target in modern rheumatoid arthritis (RA) care.[1]

  • magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) bone marrow oedema, synovitis, and tenosynovitis improved over the first year, and was sustained during the second year of follow-up, with no statistically significant differences between the ultrasound and the conventional arms at any time-point

  • The 2-year risk for progression of MRI erosions was similar in both treatment arms, ultrasound arm: 39%, conventional arm: 33%, RR: 1.16, p=0.40

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Summary

Introduction

Clinical remission is the preferred treatment target in modern rheumatoid arthritis (RA) care.[1] In patients who achieve a state of clinical remission, residual subclinical inflammation is frequently detectable by ultrasonography or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).[2, 3] As such inflammation has been found to be associated with continued structural deterioration of the joints,[4, 5] it has been debated whether treatment should target imaging remission.[6,7,8]. Two recent trials have investigated the use of structured ultrasound assessment in a treat-totarget drug escalation strategy in early RA: the ARCTIC trial [9] and the TaSER trial [10]. If treatment strategies targeting subclinical inflammation did inhibit structural damage progression, it could possibly have implications on long-term outcomes of function and disability

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