Disease-modifying drug retention rate according to patient age in patients with early rheumatoid arthritis: analysis of the ESPOIR cohort

被引:0
|
作者
S. Mathieu
B. Pereira
A. Saraux
C. Richez
B. Combe
M. Soubrier
机构
[1] CHU Gabriel Montpied,Rheumatology Department
[2] Clermont 1 University,Department of Clinical Research and Innovation (DRCI)
[3] University Hospital of Clermont-Ferrand (CHU),Department of Rheumatology
[4] Brest University Hospital,Rheumatology Department
[5] CHU Pellegrin,Département de Rhumatologie
[6] CHU Montpellier,undefined
[7] Université de Montpellier,undefined
来源
Rheumatology International | 2021年 / 41卷
关键词
Rheumatoid arthritis; ESPOIR cohort; Elderly; Drug retention;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Physicians are sometimes hesitant to use disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs) in elderly patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), as they are deemed too fragile, although there are no sufficient scientific evidence. We aimed to compare DMARD treatment retention in early RA patients from the ESPOIR cohort, according to age upon inclusion. Overall, treatment retention was evaluated as the percentage of patients whose DMARDs were not stopped, with stratification by age group: < 50, 50–64, and > 65 years. Survival curves were measured using the Kaplan–Meier method. Of the entire ESPOIR cohort (n = 813), 7% were > 65 years old. Methotrexate (MTX) was used by 521 patients, and was the sole DMARD for 198 patients. MTX treatment retention appeared better in patients > 65 years old compared to < 50 years old [HR 0.45 (0.25; 0.81); p = 0.008, n = 195/198] with adjustment on sex, smoking, positive anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide antibodies, positive rheumatoid factor, body mass index, changes in DAS28 and corticosteroid treatment. The proportion of patients using etanercept (n = 111), and this drug’s retention rate, did not differ according to patient age. The proportion of patients treated with adalimumab (n = 104) was significantly higher in patients < 50 years old (p = 0.003), and treatment retention was marginally better among younger patients [HR 1.68 (0.88; 3.22), p = 0.12]. Within the ESPOIR cohort, DMARD retention did not appear to differ according to age—except for better retention of MTX treatment in patients 50–64 years old, and of adalimumab in patients < 50 years old.
引用
收藏
页码:879 / 885
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Medical resource use and costs among rheumatoid arthritis patients receiving disease-modifying antirheumatic drug therapy
    Griffiths, RI
    Bar-Din, M
    MacLean, CH
    Sullivan, EM
    Herbert, RJ
    Yelin, EH
    ARTHRITIS CARE AND RESEARCH, 2000, 13 (04): : 213 - 226
  • [42] Patterns of disease-modifying antirheumatic drug use, medical resource consumption, and cost among rheumatoid arthritis patients
    Griffiths, RI
    Bar-Din, M
    MacLean, C
    Sullivan, EM
    Herbert, RJ
    Yelin, EH
    THERAPEUTIC APHERESIS, 2001, 5 (02): : 92 - 104
  • [43] Markers of B-lymphocyte activation are elevated in patients with early rheumatoid arthritis and correlated with disease activity in the ESPOIR cohort
    Jacques-Eric Gottenberg
    Corinne Miceli-Richard
    Béatrice Ducot
    Philippe Goupille
    Bernard Combe
    Xavier Mariette
    Arthritis Research & Therapy, 11
  • [44] Disease-modifying antirheumatic drug prescription patterns in adult rheumatoid arthritis patients in routine clinical practice in Spain
    Hernandez Cruz, Blanca
    Urena Garnica, Inmaculada
    Sanchez Parera, Ricardo
    Rubio Romero, Esteban
    Calvo Gutierrez, Jerusalen
    Garcia Sanchez, Antonio
    Rodriguez Escalera, Carlos
    Navarro Sarabia, Federico
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF RHEUMATOLOGY, 2020, 7 (04) : 149 - 157
  • [45] Correlation of Hematological Indices and Acute-Phase Reactants in Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients on Disease-Modifying Antirheumatic Drugs: A Retrospective Cohort Analysis
    Pan, Yu-Jen
    Su, Kuei-Ying
    Shen, Chih-Lung
    Wu, Yi-Feng
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE, 2023, 12 (24)
  • [46] Sustained Long-Term Retention Rates of Abatacept in Combination with Conventional Synthetic Disease-Modifying Antirheumatic Drugs in Elderly Patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis
    Sato, Shuzo
    Matsumoto, Haruki
    Temmoku, Jumpei
    Fujita, Yuya
    Matsuoka, Naoki
    Yashiro-Furuya, Makiko
    Asano, Tomoyuki
    Suzuki, Eiji
    Watanabe, Hiroshi
    Kanno, Takashi
    Migita, Kiyoshi
    MEDICINA-LITHUANIA, 2021, 57 (09):
  • [47] Factors associated with the achievement of biological disease-modifying antirheumatic drug-free remission in rheumatoid arthritis: the ANSWER cohort study
    Hashimoto, Motomu
    Furu, Moritoshi
    Yamamoto, Wararu
    Fujimura, Takanori
    Hara, Ryota
    Katayama, Masaki
    Ohnishi, Akira
    Akashi, Kengo
    Yoshida, Shuzo
    Nagai, Koji
    Son, Yonsu
    Amuro, Hideki
    Hirano, Toru
    Ebina, Kosuke
    Uozumi, Ryuji
    Ito, Hiromu
    Tanaka, Masao
    Ohmura, Koichiro
    Fujii, Takao
    Mimori, Tsuneyo
    ARTHRITIS RESEARCH & THERAPY, 2018, 20
  • [48] Severe adverse drug reactions to biological disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs in elderly patients with rheumatoid arthritis in clinical practice
    Leon, L.
    Gomez, A.
    Vadillo, C.
    Pato, E.
    Rodriguez-Rodriguez, L.
    Jover, J. A.
    Abasolo, L.
    CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RHEUMATOLOGY, 2018, 36 (01) : 29 - 35
  • [49] UK cost-utility analysis of rituximab in patients with rheumatoid arthritis that failed to respond adequately to a biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drug
    Kielhorn, Adrian
    Porter, Duncan
    Diamantopoulos, Alexander
    Lewis, Gavin
    CURRENT MEDICAL RESEARCH AND OPINION, 2008, 24 (09) : 2639 - 2650
  • [50] Patient, disease, and therapy-related factors that influence discontinuation of disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs: A population-based incidence cohort of patients with rheumatoid arthritis
    Maradit-Kremers, H
    Nicola, PJ
    Crowson, CS
    O'Fallon, WM
    Gabriel, SE
    JOURNAL OF RHEUMATOLOGY, 2006, 33 (02) : 248 - 255