Abstract

Background:Patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) have a higher risk of osteoporosis not only due to chronic inflammation status, but also due to the treatment with glucocorticoids. FRAX is a computer-based algorithm developed by the World Health Organization for estimation of the 10-year risk of a hip or major osteoporotic fracture. Inclusion of femoral neck bone mineral density (BMD) in the estimation is optional.Objectives:The study aimed to identify the RA patients under treatment with biological disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (bDMARD), who have FRAX scores, calculated with and without BMD, classified as high fracture risk and evaluate if they are receiving treatment for osteoporosis. The authors also investigated the intra-individual agreement between FRAX fracture risk calculated with and without BMD.Methods:Demographic and clinical data and BMD results from RA patients followed in a tertiary university hospital and registered in the Rheumatic Diseases Portuguese Register were used for analysis. Patients under 40 years of age at the last visit were excluded. McNemar test was applied for the identification of discordance of risk categories. The Wilcoxon test was used to characterize the intraindividual differences between paired FRAX risks with and without BMD. Correlations between pairs of variables were evaluated by the Spearman test. For independent variables Mann-Whitney test was used.Results:A total of 303 patients were included, 244 were females (80.5%) and 49 current smokers (16.2%). Mean age was 59.5 ± 9.54 years and mean disease duration 18.5 ± 10.4 years. Two hundred and twenty patients (72.4%) and 243 (80.2%) were RF and ACPA positive, respectively, and 51.5% had erosive disease. Mean disease activity score (DAS28-4V-CRP) was 3.08 ± 1.18 and mean femoral neck BMD 0.84 ± 0.12 g/cm2. One hundred and seventy nine patients (58.9%) were concomitantly treated with conventional synthetic DMARDs and 215 (70.7%) with glucocorticoids. Among all the patients, 35 (11.6%) had previous fractures and 19 (6.3%) have family history of fracture. The median 10-year risk of a major fracture and a hip fracture, calculated without BMD, was 6.0 (1.2-50) and 1.5 (0.1-39), respectively; with BMD it was 6.9 (1.3-61) and 1.7 (0-49). When FRAX score is calculated without BMD (n=303), 76 (25.1%) patients were categorized as high fracture risk. Among them, only 41 (54%) were receiving osteoporosis treatment. FRAX assessment with BMD (n=231) identified 99 (32.7%) patients with high fracture risk, 51 (51,5%) in treatment for osteoporosis. Thirty patients (21%) previously classified as low fracture risk using FRAX without BMD were recategorized as high risk (p<0.001). Despite that, there was a strong correlation between fracture risks assessed with and without BMD for both major and hip fracture (r = 0.867, p < 0.0001 and r = 0.728, p < 0.0001, respectively). ACPA and RF positive patients did not have higher FRAX scores (including or not BMA). Patients with erosive disease had a higher 10-year probability of major fracture evaluated by FRAX when it includes BMD (p=0.041).Conclusion:It is very important to accurately assess the risk of osteoporotic fractures in RA patients to treat them properly. The authors highlight the high number of patients who are not receiving treatment according to FRAX categorization. In spite of the correlation between estimated fracture risk by FRAX with and without BMD, there is a discordance in fracture risk categorization, as one fifth of patients of low risk were reclassified as high risk. For the RA population treated with bDMARDS, our findings raise the need to request a DXA not only for patients classified as having an intermediate risk of fracture, but also for low-risk patients.Disclosure of Interests:Maria Rato: None declared, Filipe Pinheiro: None declared, Salomé Garcia: None declared, Bruno Miguel Fernandes: None declared, Sara Ganhão: None declared, Rita Gaio: None declared, Miguel Bernardes Speakers bureau: Abbvie, Amgen, Biogen, Eli-Lilly, Glaxo-Smith-Kline, Pfizer, Janssen, Novartis, Alexandra Bernardo: None declared, Lúcia Costa: None declared

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