Author:
Raterman H G,Voskuyl A E,Simsek S,Schreurs M W J,van Hoogstraten I M W,Peters M J L,van Halm V P,Dijkmans B A C,Lips P,Lems W F,Nurmohamed M T
Abstract
ObjectiveAutoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and hypothyroidism tend to cluster, and this coexistence amplifies the elevated cardiovascular risk in RA. Whether thyroid peroxidase antibodies (TPOabs) are associated with increased cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk has not been studied extensively. Therefore, this study determined firstly the prevalence of TPOabs in RA and secondly whether TPOabs were associated with CVD. Moreover, this study explored whether TPOabs were related to RA characteristics.Design and methodsData from the CARRÉ Study, an ongoing study investigating CVDs and its risk factors in RA (n=322), was used to ascertain the prevalence of TPOabs in RA patients. In addition, cardiovascular and RA disease characteristics were compared between TPOabs-positive and -negative patients at baseline and at a second visit after 3 years.ResultsTPOabs were present in 47/322 (15%) RA patients and TSH levels were higher in TPOabs-positive patients (1.40 mU/l) compared with TPOabs-negative patients (1.26 mU/l, P=0.048). At baseline and after 3 years no association was observed between TPOabs and (risk factors for) CVD. Regression analyses revealed a significantly larger progression of carotid intima media thickness (cIMT; β=0.13 mm) in TPOabs-positive compared with TPOabs-negative patients independent of risk factors for cIMT progression. RA disease activity scores (DAS28) were higher in TPOabs-positive compared with TPOabs-negative patients (4.4 vs 3.8 P=0.018).ConclusionsTPOabs were associated with increased cIMT progression. Moreover, an association between TPOabs and DAS28 was observed. Hence, TPOabs seems to have a role in the amplified cardiovascular risk in RA patients.
Subject
Endocrinology,General Medicine,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
Cited by
16 articles.
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