Physician estimate of inflammation vs global assessment in explaining variations in swollen joint counts in rheumatoid arthritis patients.

IF 2.1 Q3 RHEUMATOLOGY
Rheumatology Advances in Practice Pub Date : 2024-04-27 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1093/rap/rkae057
Juan Schmukler, Tengfei Li, Theodore Pincus
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Abstract

Objective: To analyse patients with RA for inflammatory activity by physician estimate of global assessment (DOCGL) vs an estimate of inflammatory activity (DOCINF) to explain variation in the swollen joint count (SJC).

Methods: Patients with RA were studied at routine care visits. Patients completed a multidimensional health assessment questionnaire (MDHAQ) and the physician completed a 28-joint count for swollen (SJC), tender (TJC) and deformed (DJC) joints and a RheuMetric checklist with a 0-10 DOCGL visual numeric scale (VNS) and 0-10 VNS estimates of inflammation (DOCINF), damage (DOCDAM) and patient distress (DOCSTR). The disease activity score in 28 joints with ESR (DAS28-ESR), Clinical Disease Activity Index (CDAI) and Routine Assessment of Patient Index Data 3 (RAPID3) were calculated. Individual scores and RA indices were compared according to Spearman correlation coefficients and regression analyses.

Results: A total of 104 unselected patients were included, with a median age and disease duration of 54.5 and 5 years, respectively. The median DAS28-ESR was 2.9 (Q1-Q3: 2.0-3.7), indicating low activity. DOCINF was correlated significantly with DOCGL (ρ = 0.775). Both DOCGL and DOCINF were correlated significantly with most other measures; correlations with DOCGL were generally higher than with DOCINF other than for SJC. In regression analyses, DOCINF was more explanatory of variation in SJC than DOCGL and other DAS28-ESR components.

Conclusions: Variation in SJC is explained more by a 0-10 DOCINF VNS than the traditional DOCGL or any other measure in RA patients seen in routine care. DOCINF on a RheuMetric checklist can provide informative quantitative scores concerning inflammatory activity in RA patients monitored over long periods.

在解释类风湿性关节炎患者关节肿胀计数的变化时,医生对炎症的估计与总体评估的比较。
目的通过医生对总体评估的估计值(DOCGL)与对炎症活动的估计值(DOCINF),对RA患者的炎症活动进行分析,以解释关节肿胀计数(SJC)的变化:方法:对接受常规治疗的 RA 患者进行研究。患者填写多维健康评估问卷(MDHAQ),医生填写 28 个关节的肿胀(SJC)、压痛(TJC)和变形(DJC)计数以及 RheuMetric 检查表,其中包括 0-10 DOCGL 视觉数字量表(VNS)和 0-10 VNS 炎症(DOCINF)、损伤(DOCDAM)和患者痛苦(DOCSTR)估计值。此外,还计算了 28 个关节的疾病活动度评分(DAS28-ESR)、临床疾病活动度指数(CDAI)和患者指数数据常规评估 3(RAPID3)。根据斯皮尔曼相关系数和回归分析比较了单项评分和 RA 指数:共纳入 104 名未入选患者,中位年龄和病程分别为 54.5 岁和 5 年。DAS28-ESR的中位数为2.9(Q1-Q3:2.0-3.7),表明活动度较低。DOCINF 与 DOCGL 显著相关(ρ = 0.775)。DOCGL 和 DOCINF 与大多数其他测量指标都有显著相关性;除 SJC 外,与 DOCGL 的相关性普遍高于 DOCINF。在回归分析中,DOCINF 比 DOCGL 和 DAS28-ESR 的其他成分更能解释 SJC 的变化:结论:与传统的 DOCGL 或其他测量方法相比,0-10 DOCINF VNS 更能解释常规治疗中 RA 患者 SJC 的变化。RheuMetric检查表上的DOCINF可以为长期监测的RA患者提供有关炎症活动的信息量化评分。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Rheumatology Advances in Practice
Rheumatology Advances in Practice Medicine-Rheumatology
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
3.20%
发文量
197
审稿时长
11 weeks
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