Robinson D E, Dennison E M, Cooper C, van Staa T P, Dixon W G
Arthritis Research UK Centre for Epidemiology, Centre for Musculoskeletal Research, Institute for Inflammation and Repair, Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, University of Manchester, Manchester, M13 9PT, UK.
MRC Lifecourse Epidemiology Unit, University of Southampton, Southampton General Hospital, Tremona Road, Southampton SO16 6YD, UK; Victoria University, Wellington, New Zealand.
Bone. 2016 Sep;90:107-15. doi: 10.1016/j.bone.2016.06.001. Epub 2016 Jun 3.
Glucocorticoid therapy is used widely in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) with good efficacy but concerns about safety including fractures. Estimates of fracture risk for any given patient are complicated by the dynamic pattern of glucocorticoid use, where patients vary in their dose, duration and timing of glucocorticoid use.
To investigate which methods are currently used to attribute fractures to glucocorticoid exposure and investigate whether such methods can consider individual treatment patterns.
Thirty-eight studies used five common definitions of risk attribution to glucocorticoid exposure: "current use", "ever use", "daily dose", "cumulative dose" and "time variant". One study attempted to combine multiple definitions where "cumulative dose" was nested within "daily dose", covering the effects of dose and duration but not timing. The majority of results demonstrated an equivocal or increased risk of fracture with increased exposure, although there was wide variation, with odds ratios, hazard ratios and relative risks ranging from 0.16 to 8.16. Within definitions there was also variability in the results with the smallest range for "time variant", 1.07 to 2.8, and the largest for "cumulative dose", ranging from risk estimates of 0.88 to 8.12.
Many studies have looked into the effect of glucocorticoids on fracture risk in patients with RA. Despite this, there is no clear consensus about the magnitude of risk. This is a consequence of the varied analysis models and their different assumptions. Moreover, no current analysis method allows consideration of dose, duration and timing of glucocorticoid therapy, preventing a clear understanding of fracture risk for patients and their individual treatment patterns.
糖皮质激素疗法在类风湿关节炎(RA)患者中广泛应用,疗效良好,但存在包括骨折在内的安全性问题。由于糖皮质激素使用的动态模式,即患者在糖皮质激素使用的剂量、持续时间和时间安排上存在差异,因此对任何给定患者骨折风险的估计都很复杂。
调查目前用于将骨折归因于糖皮质激素暴露的方法,并研究这些方法是否能考虑个体治疗模式。
38项研究使用了五种常见的糖皮质激素暴露风险归因定义:“当前使用”、“曾经使用”、“每日剂量”、“累积剂量”和“时间变量”。一项研究试图将多种定义结合起来,其中“累积剂量”嵌套在“每日剂量”中,涵盖了剂量和持续时间的影响,但未涉及时间安排。大多数结果表明,随着暴露增加,骨折风险不明确或增加,尽管存在很大差异,优势比、风险比和相对风险范围为0.16至8.16。在各定义中,结果也存在差异,“时间变量”范围最小,为1.07至2.8,“累积剂量”范围最大,风险估计值为0.88至8.12。
许多研究探讨了糖皮质激素对RA患者骨折风险的影响。尽管如此,对于风险程度尚无明确共识。这是多种分析模型及其不同假设的结果。此外,目前没有分析方法能够考虑糖皮质激素治疗的剂量、持续时间和时间安排,从而无法清楚了解患者的骨折风险及其个体治疗模式。