Latent Tuberculosis Screening Among New Users of a Biologic or Targeted Synthetic Disease‐Modifying Antirheumatic Drug: Gaps in Screening Overall and Among Janus Kinase Inhibitors

Author:

Roberts Eric T.1ORCID,Schmajuk Gabriela2ORCID,Li Jing1ORCID,Murrill Matthew1,Yazdany Jinoos3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of California San Francisco

2. University of California, San Francisco, and San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center San Francisco California

3. University of California, San Francisco, and Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital San Francisco California

Abstract

ObjectiveWe combined claims and electronic health record (EHR) data to provide contemporary and accurate estimates of latent tuberculosis (TB) screening among new users of a biologic or targeted synthetic disease‐modifying antirheumatic drug (b/tsDMARD) and assess potential gaps in testing by drug type, patient characteristics, and practice.MethodsOur denominator population was patients in the Rheumatology Informatics System for Effectiveness (RISE) registry and Medicare using a b/tsDMARD in 2018 without a claim or prescription in the year prior. TB screening was assessed in both Medicare and RISE 1 and 3 years before the medication start date. We calculated the proportion screened overall, by medication class, and by practice. We tested for demographic differences in screening using logistic regression.ResultsIn the year before drug starts, 65.6% of patients had any TB screening; in a 3‐year window, 72.9% had any TB screening. Rates of screening within 1 year by drug type were greater or equal to the overall screening rate for most drugs except for JAK inhibitors (JAKis) (46%) and interleukin‐17 inhibitors (IL‐17is) (11.5%). A lower proportion of Hispanic and Asian patients were screened compared with White patients. Practice screening rates ranged from 20.0% to 92.9% of patients within 1 year.ConclusionWe report higher screening rates than have previously been published because of combining claims and EHR data. However, important safety gaps remain, namely, reduced screening among new users of a JAKi or IL‐17i and among Asian and Hispanic patients, as well as low‐performing practices. Educational initiatives, team‐based care delivery, task shifting, and technological interventions to address observed gaps in patient safety procedures are needed.

Funder

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality

Publisher

Wiley

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