Cohort profile: SCREEN-RA: design, methods and perspectives of a Swiss cohort study of first-degree relatives of patients with rheumatoid arthritis

Author:

Gilbert Benoit Thomas PORCID,Lamacchia Céline,Mongin Denis,Lauper KimORCID,Trunk Eric,Studer Olivia,Courvoisier Delphine SORCID,Rubbert-Roth Andrea,Kyburz Diego,Moeller Burkhard,Finckh Axel

Abstract

PurposeRheumatoid arthritis (RA) is an insidious autoimmune disease, with an immunological onset years before diagnosis. Early interventions in preclinical stages could prevent or minimise the progression towards irreversible joint damage. The SCREEN-RA cohort (Evaluation of a SCREENing strategy for Rheumatoid Arthritis) aims to characterise the preclinical stages of the disease, to identify environmental risk factors, and to discover or validate novel biomarkers predictive for RA development.ParticipantsSCREEN-RA includes an at-risk population for RA, namely first-degree relatives of patients with established RA.Findings to dateThe cohort started in 2009 is composed of mostly asymptomatic healthy individuals (total n=1458, 7262 person-years), with a mean age of 44 years at enrolment, 74% female and 91% Caucasian ethnicity. During the study period, 16 participants have developed RA. All participants provide baseline serum, DNA and RNA samples, and in a subset, stool samples and oral examination are performed for microbiota assessment. At enrolment, 10% of participants had asymptomatic autoimmunity associated with RA (n=147), 10% presented ‘clinically suspect arthralgias’ (n=143) and 3% reported arthralgias in conjunction with autoimmunity or high genetic risk (n=51). Studies with this cohort have uncovered risk factors for RA development, such as female hormonal factors, poor oral health or intestinal dysbiosis.Future plansFuture directions include immunological and ‘multiomics’ approaches to discover new biological markers of progression towards RA, as well as testing preventive interventions in ‘high-risk’ population.

Funder

Fondation Ernst et Lucie Schmidheiny

Fondation Centre de Recherches Médicales Carlos et Elsie de Reuter

Swiss National Science Foundation

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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