Associations between inflammation, nocturnal back pain and fatigue in ankylosing spondylitis and improvements with etanercept therapy

Author:

Hammoudeh Mohammed1,Zack Debra J2,Li Wenzhi3,Stewart V Michelle4,Koenig Andrew S5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Rheumatology, Hamad Medical Corporation, Doha, Qatar

2. Inflammation Global Clinical Development, Amgen Inc., Thousand Oaks, CA, USA

3. PharmaNet/i3, Collegeville, PA, USA

4. Outcomes Research, Department of Specialty Care, Pfizer Inc, Groton, CT, USA

5. Inflammation and Immunology, Department of Specialty Care, Pfizer Inc, Collegeville, PA, USA

Abstract

Objectives To investigate the relationships between inflammation, nocturnal back pain and fatigue in ankylosing spondylitis (AS) and the impact of 12 weeks' etanercept treatment versus sulfasalazine or placebo. Methods Data were combined from four clinical trials for patients with AS who received at least one dose of etanercept, sulfasalazine or placebo and had at least one postbaseline assessment value. Linear regression was performed (controlling for site, protocol and demographics), to explore the relationship between inflammation (C-reactive protein [CRP]), nocturnal back pain (visual analog scale [VAS] 0–100 mm) and fatigue (VAS 0–100 mm Bath AS Disease Activity Index fatigue item). Results Out of 1283 patients (etanercept, n = 867; sulfasalazine, n = 187; placebo, n = 229), improvement in nocturnal back pain was a significant predictor of improvement in fatigue. Significant correlations were found between nocturnal back pain and fatigue, but not CRP levels. Etanercept provided significantly greater pain/fatigue improvement than sulfasalazine or placebo. Improvements in nocturnal back pain and fatigue had weak relationships with improvement in inflammation (CRP level). Conclusions AS patients treated with etanercept demonstrated superior improvement in nocturnal back pain and fatigue versus sulfasalazine or placebo. Decrease in nocturnal back pain can improve fatigue. Assessing treatment response using CRP levels alone may be misleading without also examining patient-reported outcomes such as back pain and fatigue.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Biochemistry, medical,Cell Biology,Biochemistry,General Medicine

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