Møller-Bisgaard Signe, Hørslev-Petersen Kim, Ejbjerg Bo Jannik, Boesen Mikael, Hetland Merete Lund, Christensen Robin, Møller Jakob, Krogh Niels Steen, Stengaard-Pedersen Kristian, Østergaard Mikkel
Department of Rheumatology, Copenhagen University Hospital, Slagelse, Denmark.
DANBIO registry and Copenhagen Centre for Arthritis Research, Centre for Rheumatology and Spine Diseases, Copenhagen University Hospital, Glostrup, Denmark.
Trials. 2015 Apr 21;16:178. doi: 10.1186/s13063-015-0693-2.
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic, progressive joint disease, which frequently leads to irreversible joint deformity and severe functional impairment. Although patients are treated according to existing guidelines and reach clinical remission, erosive progression still occurs. This demonstrates that additional methods for prognostication and monitoring of the disease activity are needed. Bone marrow edema (BME) detected by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has proved to be an independent predictor of subsequent radiographic progression. Guiding the treatment based on the presence/absence of BME may therefore be clinically beneficial. We present the design of a randomized controlled trial (RCT) aiming to evaluate whether an MRI-guided treatment strategy compared to a conventional treatment strategy in anti-CCP-positive erosive RA is better to prevent progression of erosive joint damage and increase the remission rate in patients with low disease activity or clinical remission.
METHODS/DESIGN: The study is a non-blinded, multicenter, 2-year RCT with a parallel group design. Two hundred anti-CCP-positive, erosive RA patients characterized by low disease activity or remission, no clinically swollen joints and treatment with synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs) will be included. Patients will be randomized to either a treatment strategy based on conventional laboratory and clinical examinations (control group) or a treatment strategy based on conventional laboratory and clinical examinations as well as MRI (intervention group). Treatment is intensified according to a predefined treatment algorithm in case of inflammation defined as a disease activity score (DAS28) >3.2 and at least one clinically swollen joint (control and intervention groups) and/or MRI-detected BME (intervention group only). The primary outcome measures are DAS28 remission (DAS28 < 2.6) and radiographic progression (Sharp/vdHeijde score).
The perspectives, strengths and weaknesses of this study are discussed. This study has been approved by The Regional Scientific Ethical Committees for Southern Denmark, S-20110109. Dissemination will occur through presentations and publication in international peer-reviewed journals.
The study is registered in http://www.ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT01656278 (5 July 2012).
类风湿关节炎(RA)是一种慢性进行性关节疾病,常导致不可逆的关节畸形和严重的功能障碍。尽管患者按照现有指南进行治疗并达到临床缓解,但侵蚀性进展仍会发生。这表明需要额外的疾病活动度预后评估和监测方法。磁共振成像(MRI)检测到的骨髓水肿(BME)已被证明是后续影像学进展的独立预测指标。因此,根据BME的有无指导治疗可能具有临床益处。我们介绍一项随机对照试验(RCT)的设计,旨在评估在抗环瓜氨酸肽(anti-CCP)阳性侵蚀性RA患者中,与传统治疗策略相比,MRI引导的治疗策略是否更能有效预防侵蚀性关节损伤的进展,并提高疾病活动度低或临床缓解患者的缓解率。
方法/设计:本研究为非盲法、多中心、为期2年的RCT,采用平行组设计。将纳入200例anti-CCP阳性、侵蚀性RA患者,其特点为疾病活动度低或处于缓解期,无临床肿胀关节,且正在接受合成改善病情抗风湿药(DMARDs)治疗。患者将被随机分为基于传统实验室和临床检查的治疗策略组(对照组)或基于传统实验室和临床检查以及MRI的治疗策略组(干预组)。如果炎症定义为疾病活动评分(DAS28)>3.2且至少有一个临床肿胀关节(对照组和干预组)和/或MRI检测到的BME(仅干预组),则根据预定义的治疗算法强化治疗。主要结局指标为DAS28缓解(DAS28<2.6)和影像学进展(Sharp/vdHeijde评分)。
讨论了本研究的前景、优势和不足。本研究已获得丹麦南部地区科学伦理委员会批准,批准号为S-20110109。研究结果将通过在国际同行评审期刊上发表论文及进行学术报告的方式进行传播。
本研究已在http://www.ClinicalTrials.gov注册,标识符为:NCT01656278(2012年7月5日)。