Masri Karim R, Shaver Timothy S, Shahouri Shadi H, Wang Shirley, Anderson James D, Busch Ruth E, Michaud Kaleb, Mikuls Ted R, Caplan Liron, Wolfe Frederick
University of Kansas School of Medicine, Wichita, KA, USA.
J Rheumatol. 2012 Jun;39(6):1139-45. doi: 10.3899/jrheum.111543. Epub 2012 May 15.
To investigate what factors influence patient global health assessment (PtGlobal), and how those factors and the reliability of PtGlobal affect the rate, reliability, and validity of recently published American College of Rheumatology/European League Against Rheumatism (ACR/EULAR) rheumatoid arthritis (RA) remission criteria when used in clinical practice.
We examined consecutive patients with RA in clinical practice and identified 77 who met ACR/EULAR joint criteria for remission (≤ 1 swollen joint and ≤ 1 tender joint). We evaluated factors associated with a PtGlobal > 1, because a PtGlobal ≤ 1 defined ACR/EULAR remission in this group of patients who had already met ACR/EULAR joint criteria.
Of the 77 patients examined, only 17 (22.1%) had PtGlobal ≤ 1 and thus fully satisfied ACR/EULAR criteria. A large proportion of patients not in remission by ACR/EULAR criteria had high PtGlobal related to noninflammatory issues, including low back pain, fatigue, and functional limitations, and a number of patients clustered in the range of PtGlobal > 1 and ≤ 2. However, the minimal detectable difference for PtGlobal was 2.3. In addition, compared with a PtGlobal severity score, a PtGlobal activity score was 3.3% less likely to be abnormal (> 1).
Noninflammatory factors contribute to the level of PtGlobal and result in the exclusion of many patients who would otherwise be in "true" remission according to the ACR/EULAR definition. Reliability problems associated with PtGlobal can also result in misclassification, and may explain the observation of low longterm remission rates in RA. As currently constituted, the use of the ACR/EULAR remission criteria in clinical practice appears to be problematic.
探讨哪些因素会影响患者整体健康评估(PtGlobal),以及这些因素和PtGlobal的可靠性如何影响最近发布的美国风湿病学会/欧洲抗风湿病联盟(ACR/EULAR)类风湿关节炎(RA)缓解标准在临床实践中的应用率、可靠性和有效性。
我们在临床实践中检查了连续的RA患者,确定了77名符合ACR/EULAR关节缓解标准(≤1个肿胀关节和≤1个压痛关节)的患者。我们评估了与PtGlobal>1相关的因素,因为在这组已符合ACR/EULAR关节标准的患者中,PtGlobal≤1定义为ACR/EULAR缓解。
在检查的77名患者中,只有17名(22.1%)的PtGlobal≤1,因此完全符合ACR/EULAR标准。很大一部分未达到ACR/EULAR标准缓解的患者的PtGlobal较高,这与非炎症问题有关,包括腰痛、疲劳和功能受限,并且一些患者聚集在PtGlobal>1且≤2的范围内。然而,PtGlobal的最小可检测差异为2.3。此外,与PtGlobal严重程度评分相比,PtGlobal活动评分异常(>1)的可能性低3.3%。
非炎症因素导致了PtGlobal的水平,并导致许多根据ACR/EULAR定义原本会处于“真正”缓解状态的患者被排除在外。与PtGlobal相关的可靠性问题也可能导致错误分类,并可能解释RA长期缓解率较低的现象。按照目前的构成,ACR/EULAR缓解标准在临床实践中的应用似乎存在问题。