The relationship between obesity, cardiometabolic disorders and disease activity in psoriatic arthritis patients: data from the Russian register

Author:

Korsakova Yuliia L.ORCID,Korotaeva Tatiana V.ORCID,Loginova Elena I.ORCID,Gubar Elena E.ORCID,Vasilenko Elizaveta A.ORCID,Vasilenko Aleksei A.ORCID,Kuznetsova Natalia A.ORCID,Patrikeeva Irina M.ORCID,Nasonov Evgeny L.ORCID

Abstract

Aim. To study the relationship between obesity, cardiometabolic disorders and disease activity in patients with psoriatic arthritis (PsA) in real practice. Materials and methods. The Russian register included 614 PsA patients [female 331 (54%)/283 (46%)]. Average age 45.20.52 years, PsA duration 5.70.27 years, psoriasis 15.710.56 years. Patients underwent examination, body mass index (BMI), PsA activity according to DAPSA, cDAPSA, analysis of concomitant diseases were assessed. The patients were divided into 3 groups depending on BMI (kg/m2): normal 25 (group 1), increased 2530 (group 2), obesity 30 (group 3). Results. The average BMI was 27.70.23 kg/m2, normal BMI in 213 (34.7%), increased in 214 (34.8%) and obesity in 187 (30.5%). Concomitant diseases in 297 (48%). In group 3, arterial hypertension was observed significantly more often than in groups 1 and 2 (p0.0001); more often than in group 2 diabetes mellitus (p0.0001), metabolic syndrome (p0.0001); more often than in group 1 ischemic heart disease (p=0.026). PsA activity at Baseline, after 6/12 months was significantly higher in group 3 (p0.031). In obese patients, the chance of a decrease in disease activity to a moderate/low level and remission during therapy for 6/12 months is 2.484 times lower than in group 1, and 2.346 times lower than in group 2: odds ratio 2.346 (95% сonfidence interval 1.075.143) and 2.484 (95% сonfidence interval 1.1355.439), respectively. Conclusion. In the majority (65.3%) of PsA patients, BMI exceeded the norm. Obesity is associated with a high incidence of cardiometabolic disorders, with higher PsA activity and lower treatment efficacy.

Publisher

Consilium Medicum

Subject

General Medicine,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,History,Family Practice

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