Published in:
01-06-2017 | Observational Research
Comparative effectiveness of treatment options after conventional DMARDs failure in rheumatoid arthritis
Authors:
Yoon-Kyoung Sung, Soo-Kyung Cho, Dam Kim, Chan-Bum Choi, Soyoung Won, So-Young Bang, Hoon-Suk Cha, Jung-Yoon Choe, Won Tae Chung, Seung-Jae Hong, Jae-Bum Jun, Hyoun Ah Kim, Jinseok Kim, Seong-Kyu Kim, Tae-Hwan Kim, Hye-Soon Lee, Jaejoon Lee, Jisoo Lee, Shin-Seok Lee, Sung Won Lee, Yeon-Ah Lee, Seong-Su Nah, Chang-Hee Suh, Dae-Hyun Yoo, Bo Young Yoon, Sang Cheol Bae, For the BIOPSY and KORONA investigators
Published in:
Rheumatology International
|
Issue 6/2017
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Abstract
Objective
To compare the clinical effectiveness of two treatment strategies for active rheumatoid arthritis (RA) refractory to conventional synthetic disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (csDMARDs): starting TNF inhibitors (TNFIs) or changing csDMARDs.
Methods
We used two nationwide Korean RA registries for patient selection. TNFI users were selected from the BIOPSY, which is an inception cohort of RA patients starting biologic DMARDs. As a control group, we selected RA patients with moderate or high disease activity from the KORONA database whose treatment was changed to other csDMARDs. After comparing baseline characteristics between the two groups in either unmatched or propensity score matched cohorts, we compared potential differences in the 1-year remission rate as a primary outcome and changes in HAQ-DI and EQ-5D scores as secondary outcomes.
Results
A total of 356 TNFI starters and 586 csDMARD changers were identified from each registry as unmatched cohorts, and 294 patients were included in the propensity score matched cohort. In the intention-to-treat analysis, TNFI starters had higher 1-year remission rates than csDMARD changers in both unmatched (19.1 vs. 18.4%, p < 0.01) and matched cohorts (19.7 vs. 15.0%, p < 0.01). In per protocol analysis, TNFI starters had much higher remission rates in unmatched (37.2 vs. 28.0%, p = 0.04) and matched cohorts (35.4 vs. 19.1%, p = 0.04). However, in matched cohorts, no significant differences were observed between two groups in HAQ-DI and EQ-5D scores.
Conclusions
We compared the clinical effectiveness of the two treatment strategies for active RA refractory to csDMARDs. TNFI starters showed higher 1-year remission rates than csDMARD changers.