Hazlewood Glen S, Barnabe Cheryl, Tomlinson George, Marshall Deborah, Devoe Daniel J A, Bombardier Claire
Department of Medicine and Department of Community Health Sciences, University of Calgary, 3330 Hospital Drive NW, Calgary, ON, Canada, T2N 1N1.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2016 Aug 29;2016(8):CD010227. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD010227.pub2.
Methotrexate is considered the preferred disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drug (DMARD) for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, but controversy exists on the additional benefits and harms of combining methotrexate with other DMARDs.
To compare methotrexate and methotrexate-based DMARD combinations for rheumatoid arthritis in patients naïve to or with an inadequate response (IR) to methotrexate.
We systematically identified all randomised controlled trials with methotrexate monotherapy or in combination with any currently used conventional synthetic DMARD , biologic DMARDs, or tofacitinib. Three major outcomes (ACR50 response, radiographic progression and withdrawals due to adverse events) and multiple minor outcomes were evaluated. Treatment effects were summarized using Bayesian random-effects network meta-analyses, separately for methotrexate-naïve and methotrexate-IR trials. Heterogeneity was explored through meta-regression and subgroup analyses. The risk of bias of each trial was assessed using the Cochrane risk of bias tool, and trials at high risk of bias were excluded from the main analysis. The quality of evidence was evaluated using the GRADE approach. A comparison between two treatments was considered statistically significant if its credible interval excluded the null effect, indicating >97.5% probability that one treatment was superior.
158 trials with over 37,000 patients were included. Methotrexate-naïve: Several treatment combinations with methotrexate were statistically superior to oral methotrexate for ACR50 response: methotrexate + sulfasalazine + hydroxychloroquine ("triple therapy"), methotrexate + several biologics (abatacept, adalimumab, etanercept, infliximab, rituximab, tocilizumab), and tofacitinib. The estimated probability of ACR50 response was similar between these treatments (range 56-67%, moderate to high quality evidence), compared with 41% for methotrexate. Methotrexate combined with adalimumab, etanercept, certolizumab, or infliximab was statistically superior to oral methotrexate for inhibiting radiographic progression (moderate to high quality evidence) but the estimated mean change over one year with all treatments was less than the minimal clinically important difference of five units on the Sharp-van der Heijde scale. Methotrexate + azathioprine had statistically more withdrawals due to adverse events than oral methotrexate, and triple therapy had statistically fewer withdrawals due to adverse events than methotrexate + infliximab (rate ratio 0.26, 95% credible interval: 0.06 to 0.91). Methotrexate-inadequate response: In patients with an inadequate response to methotrexate, several treatments were statistically significantly superior to oral methotrexate for ACR50 response: triple therapy (moderate quality evidence), methotrexate + hydroxychloroquine (low quality evidence), methotrexate + leflunomide (moderate quality evidence), methotrexate + intramuscular gold (very low quality evidence), methotrexate + most biologics (moderate to high quality evidence), and methotrexate + tofacitinib (high quality evidence). There was a 61% probability of an ACR50 response with triple therapy, compared to a range of 27% to 64% for the combinations of methotrexate + biologic DMARDs that were statistically significantly superior to oral methotrexate. No treatment was statistically significantly superior to oral methotrexate for inhibiting radiographic progression. Methotrexate + cyclosporine and methotrexate + tocilizumab (8 mg/kg) had a statistically higher rate of withdrawals due to adverse events than oral methotrexate and methotrexate + abatacept had a statistically lower rate of withdrawals due to adverse events than several treatments.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: We found moderate to high quality evidence that combination therapy with methotrexate + sulfasalazine+ hydroxychloroquine (triple therapy) or methotrexate + most biologic DMARDs or tofacitinib were similarly effective in controlling disease activity and generally well tolerated in methotrexate-naïve patients or after an inadequate response to methotrexate. Methotrexate + some biologic DMARDs were superior to methotrexate in preventing joint damage in methotrexate-naïve patients, but the magnitude of these effects was small over one year.
甲氨蝶呤被认为是治疗类风湿性关节炎的首选改善病情抗风湿药(DMARD),但对于甲氨蝶呤与其他DMARD联合使用的额外益处和危害存在争议。
比较甲氨蝶呤及以甲氨蝶呤为基础的DMARD联合用药方案,用于初治或对甲氨蝶呤反应不足(IR)的类风湿性关节炎患者。
我们系统检索了所有甲氨蝶呤单药治疗或与任何目前使用的传统合成DMARD、生物DMARD或托法替布联合使用的随机对照试验。评估了三个主要结局(美国风湿病学会50%反应率、影像学进展和因不良事件导致的停药)以及多个次要结局。分别针对初治甲氨蝶呤和甲氨蝶呤反应不足的试验,采用贝叶斯随机效应网络荟萃分析总结治疗效果。通过荟萃回归和亚组分析探讨异质性。使用Cochrane偏倚风险工具评估每个试验的偏倚风险,偏倚风险高的试验被排除在主要分析之外。采用GRADE方法评估证据质量。如果两种治疗的可信区间排除了无效效应,表明一种治疗优于另一种治疗的概率>97.5%,则认为两种治疗之间的比较具有统计学意义。
纳入了158项试验,涉及超过37000名患者。初治甲氨蝶呤:几种甲氨蝶呤联合治疗方案在ACR50反应方面在统计学上优于口服甲氨蝶呤:甲氨蝶呤+柳氮磺吡啶+羟氯喹(“三联疗法”)、甲氨蝶呤+几种生物制剂(阿巴西普、阿达木单抗、依那西普、英夫利昔单抗、利妥昔单抗、托珠单抗)以及托法替布。这些治疗方案的ACR50反应估计概率相似(范围为56 - 67%,中等至高质量证据),而甲氨蝶呤为41%。甲氨蝶呤联合阿达木单抗、依那西普、赛妥珠单抗或英夫利昔单抗在抑制影像学进展方面在统计学上优于口服甲氨蝶呤(中等至高质量证据),但所有治疗方案一年的估计平均变化小于Sharp-van der Heijde量表上最小临床重要差异的5个单位。甲氨蝶呤+硫唑嘌呤因不良事件导致的停药在统计学上多于口服甲氨蝶呤,三联疗法因不良事件导致的停药在统计学上少于甲氨蝶呤+英夫利昔单抗(率比0.26,95%可信区间:0.06至0.91)。甲氨蝶呤反应不足:在对甲氨蝶呤反应不足的患者中,几种治疗方案在ACR50反应方面在统计学上显著优于口服甲氨蝶呤:三联疗法(中等质量证据)、甲氨蝶呤+羟氯喹(低质量证据)、甲氨蝶呤+来氟米特(中等质量证据)、甲氨蝶呤+肌肉注射金制剂(极低质量证据)、甲氨蝶呤+大多数生物制剂(中等至高质量证据)以及甲氨蝶呤+托法替布(高质量证据)。三联疗法的ACR50反应概率为61%,而在统计学上显著优于口服甲氨蝶呤的甲氨蝶呤+生物DMARD联合治疗方案的概率范围为27%至64%。在抑制影像学进展方面,没有治疗方案在统计学上显著优于口服甲氨蝶呤。甲氨蝶呤+环孢素和甲氨蝶呤+托珠单抗(8mg/kg)因不良事件导致的停药率在统计学上高于口服甲氨蝶呤,甲氨蝶呤+阿巴西普因不良事件导致的停药率在统计学上低于几种治疗方案。
我们发现中等至高质量证据表明,甲氨蝶呤+柳氮磺吡啶+羟氯喹(三联疗法)或甲氨蝶呤+大多数生物DMARD或托法替布联合治疗在控制疾病活动方面同样有效,并且在初治甲氨蝶呤患者或对甲氨蝶呤反应不足后通常耐受性良好。在初治甲氨蝶呤患者中,甲氨蝶呤+一些生物DMARD在预防关节损伤方面优于甲氨蝶呤,但这些效果在一年中的幅度较小。