Disease activity and its predictors in early inflammatory arthritis: findings from a national cohort

Author:

Yates Mark1ORCID,Ledingham Joanna M2,Hatcher Paul Amlani3,Adas Maryam1,Hewitt Sasha4,Bartlett-Pestell Sam4,Rampes Sanketh5ORCID,Norton Sam1ORCID,Galloway James B16

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Rheumatic Diseases, King's College London

2. Department Rheumatology, Queen Alexandra Hospital, Portsmouth, UK

3. British Society for Rheumatology, NEIAA Patient Panel

4. Healthcare Quality Improvement Partnership

5. King's College London, Faculty of Life Sciences and Medicine

6. Department of Rheumatology, King's College London, UK

Abstract

Abstract Objectives We set out to characterize patient factors that predict disease activity during the first year of treatment for early inflammatory arthritis (EIA). Methods We used an observational cohort study design, extracting data from a national clinical audit. All NHS organizations providing secondary rheumatology care in England and Wales were eligible to take part, with recruitment from 215/218 (99%) clinical commissioning groups (CCGs)/Health Boards. Participants were >16 years old and newly diagnosed with RA pattern EIA between May 2018 and May 2019. Demographic details collected at baseline included age, gender, ethnicity, work status and postcode, which was converted to an area level measure of socioeconomic position (SEP). Disease activity scores (DAS28) were collected at baseline, three and 12 months follow-up. Results A total of 7455 participants were included in analyses. Significant levels of CCG/Health board variation could not be robustly identified from mixed effects modelling. Gender and SEP were predictors of low disease activity at baseline, three and 12 months follow-up. Mapping of margins identified a gradient for SEP, whereby those with higher degrees of deprivation had higher disease activity. Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic patients had lower odds of remission at three months follow-up. Conclusion Patient factors (gender, SEP, ethnicity) predict disease activity. The rheumatology community should galvanise to improve access to services for all members of society. More data are required to characterize area level variation in disease activity.

Funder

HQIP

British Society for Rheumatology and Versus Arthritis

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Rheumatology

Reference35 articles.

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