Abstract
IntroductionRheumatoid arthritis (RA) produces debilitating morning stiffness. Exogenous glucocorticoids can help with these symptoms when timed appropriately. Bedtime dosing of delayed-release prednisone (DR-prednisone) matches the rise of inflammatory cytokines before awakening and can improve stiffness and other RA symptoms. A prospective open-label study was conducted in patients currently on stable doses of immediate-release prednisone (IR-prednisone) who were switched to DR-prednisone to analyze the incremental benefit of better timed and lower dose glucocorticoid therapy.MethodsTwelve US sites enrolled patients with moderate-severe RA into a 12-week prospective study. Patients were switched from IR- to DR-prednisone while maintaining other existing background therapies. Change from baseline in morning stiffness severity, morning stiffness duration, swollen and tender joint counts (S-TJC), 28 joint disease activity score (DAS28), and patient/physician global assessment (PGA/PhGA), among others, were measured. Post-hoc analyses were performed on those completing 10 weeks of treatment and those with >60 min of morning stiffness at baseline.ResultsFifty-six patients had at least one follow-up visit and were similar in demographics to previous controlled trials with DR-prednisone with regard to baseline age and DAS28-CRP but had lower morning stiffness and RA duration. DR-prednisone produced a trend toward lower morning stiffness severity and duration with a reduction in daily prednisone dose of almost 1 mg. Patients treated with DR-prednisone for ≥10 weeks demonstrated significant reductions in morning stiffness duration, SJC, TJC, DAS28-CRP, and PhGA (all p ≤ 0.04). Patients treated for ≥10 weeks with >60 min of baseline morning stiffness produced similar results in these measures as well as a 21% reduction in morning stiffness severity (p = 0.02).ConclusionPatients switched to DR-prednisone from IR-prednisone in this practice-based study maintained or improved their outcomes across a variety of domains, and results were comparable to previous controlled trials in which patients completed at least 10 weeks of treatment.FundingHorizon Pharma USA, Inc.Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov identifier, NCT02287610.
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