Greenberg Jeffrey D, Kishimoto Mitsumasa, Strand Vibeke, Cohen Stanley B, Olenginski Thomas P, Harrington Thomas, Kafka Shelly P, Reed George, Kremer Joel M
New York University Hospital for Joint Diseases, New York, NY 10003, USA.
Am J Med. 2008 Jun;121(6):532-8. doi: 10.1016/j.amjmed.2008.02.018.
The study objective was to investigate responsiveness according to whether patients satisfy eligibility criteria from randomized controlled trials of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) antagonists in a multicentered US cohort.
Biologic-naive patients with rheumatoid arthritis who were prescribed TNF antagonists (n=465) in the Consortium of Rheumatology Researchers of North America registry were included. Patients were stratified by whether they met eligibility criteria from 3 major TNF antagonist trials. Two cohorts were examined: Cohort A (n=336) included patients with complete American College of Rheumatology response criteria except acute phase reactants, and cohort B (n=129) included patients with complete response criteria. Study outcomes included modified American College of Rheumatology 20% and 50% improvement responses (cohort A) and standard American College of Rheumatology improvement (cohort B).
A minority of patients (5.4%-19.4%) prescribed TNF antagonists met trial eligibility criteria and predominantly had high disease activity (78.5%-100%). For patients who met eligibility criteria in cohort A, rates of 20% improvement (52.3%-63.6%) and 50% improvement (30.8%-45.5%) were achieved. Among patients failing to meet eligibility criteria, rates of 20% improvement (16.2%-20.4%) and 50% improvement (8.9%-10.8%) were consistently inferior (P<.05 all comparisons). For cohort B, similar differences were observed.
This multicentered US cohort study demonstrates that the majority of patients receiving TNF antagonists would not meet trial eligibility criteria and achieve lower clinical responses. These findings highlight the tradeoff between defining treatment responsive populations and achieving results that can be generalized for broader patient populations.
本研究的目的是在美国一个多中心队列中,根据患者是否符合肿瘤坏死因子(TNF)拮抗剂随机对照试验的纳入标准,调查其反应性。
纳入北美风湿病研究人员联盟登记处中初用生物制剂、接受TNF拮抗剂治疗的类风湿关节炎患者(n = 465)。根据患者是否符合3项主要TNF拮抗剂试验的纳入标准进行分层。研究了两个队列:队列A(n = 336)包括除急性期反应物外符合美国风湿病学会完整反应标准的患者,队列B(n = 129)包括符合完整反应标准的患者。研究结局包括改良美国风湿病学会20%和50%改善反应(队列A)以及标准美国风湿病学会改善情况(队列B)。
少数接受TNF拮抗剂治疗的患者(5.4% - 19.4%)符合试验纳入标准,且主要具有高疾病活动度(78.5% - 100%)。对于队列A中符合纳入标准的患者,实现20%改善的比例为(52.3% - 63.6%),50%改善的比例为(30.8% - 45.5%)。在未符合纳入标准的患者中,20%改善的比例(16.2% - 20.4%)和50%改善的比例(8.9% - 10.8%)始终较低(所有比较P <.05)。对于队列B,观察到类似差异。
这项美国多中心队列研究表明,大多数接受TNF拮抗剂治疗的患者不符合试验纳入标准,且临床反应较低。这些发现凸显了在定义治疗反应性人群与获得可推广至更广泛患者群体的结果之间的权衡。