Abstract

Abstract Background/Aims The treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) has improved since the introduction of targeted biological disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (bDMARDs), such as adalimumab. However, no treatment options for RA are universally effective. Psychological factors may have an important role in treatment response. Published data reported that pre-treatment psychological variables such as an increased treatment necessity belief correlated with better adherence to adalimumab in RA patients. This current study aimed to investigate whether psychological factors correlate with change in 4V-DAS28-CRP as well as subcomponents of the score in adalimumab-treated RA patients. Methods Psychological, clinical and demographic data and DAS28 scores were collected pre-treatment, and at 3,6, and 12-months post-treatment, as part of a prospective national study, BRAGGSS. Sixteen pre-treatment clinical and psychological variables were tested for association with treatment response at 3 and 12 months. Multiple linear regression models were analysed and a Bonferroni corrected p-value of < 0.003 was applied at each interval to assess significance. Results Data was available for 501 patients at 3 months follow up. Pre-treatment Beliefs about Medicine Questionnaire (BMQ) scores with regards to treatment necessity (P = 0.001), and two domains of the Illness Perception Questionnaire (IPQ), which were treatment belief and treatment control (P = 0.0001), correlated with the change in DAS28 by 3 months (Table 1). At 12 months, data were available for 362 patients. The treatment belief domain of the pre-treatment Illness Perception Questionnaire correlated with the change in tender joint count (P = 0.001) (Table 1). At 12 months no other sub-components correlated with the psychological variables. Conclusion Pre-treatment scores with regards to Illness Perception and Beliefs about Medicine correlated with 4V-DAS28-CRP response at 3 months. Of the subcomponents of DAS28, the psychological variables showed the highest correlation with tender joint count; as the tender joint count receives the highest weighting in the 4 variable DAS28 score, this may confound the assessment of treatment response. It will be necessary to undertake further analyses to assess the predictive value of these potentially modifiable psychological variables identified, but to also understand factors contributing to these psychological scores, such as the role of severe disease itself on psychological beliefs. Disclosure N. Raza: None. N. Nair: None. D. Plant: None. K. Hyrich: None. A.W. Morgan: None. J. Isaacs: None. A.G. Wilson: None. A. Barton: None.

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