University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Arthritis Care Res (Hoboken). 2018 Aug;70(8):1245-1250. doi: 10.1002/acr.23470.
Health inequities exist in chronic diseases for Aboriginal people. This study compared early rheumatoid arthritis (RA) presentation, treatment, and outcomes between Aboriginal and white patients in a large Canadian cohort study.
Longitudinal data from the Canadian Early Arthritis Cohort, a prospective multicenter early RA study, were analyzed for participants who self-identified as Aboriginal or white ethnicity. Disease characteristics at presentation, prognostic factors, frequency of remission, and disease-modifying therapy strategies were contrasted between population groups. Linear mixed models were used to estimate rates of change for disease activity measures over a 5-year period.
At baseline, 2,173 participants (100 Aboriginal and 2,073 white) had similar mean ± SD symptom duration (179 ± 91 days), 28-joint Disease Activity Scores (DAS28; 4.87 ± 1.48), and Health Assessment Questionnaire (0.88 ± 0.68) scores. Factors associated with poor prognosis were more frequently present in Aboriginal participants, but disease-modifying therapy selection and frequency of therapy escalation was similar between the 2 groups. DAS28 remission was achieved less frequently in Aboriginal than in white participants (adjusted odds ratio 0.39 [95% confidence interval 0.25-0.62]). Results were primarily driven by slower improvement in swollen joint counts and nonsignificant improvement in patient global scores in Aboriginal participants. Pain levels remained higher in Aboriginal patients.
Aboriginal early RA patients experienced worse disease outcomes than their white counterparts. This may reflect unmeasured biologic differences and/or disparities in prognostic factors informed by inequities in determinants of health. The appropriateness of current treatment strategies applied in different contexts should be considered.
原住民群体在慢性病中存在健康不平等问题。本研究通过一项大型加拿大队列研究,比较了原住民和白人患者的早期类风湿关节炎(RA)表现、治疗和结局。
对加拿大早期关节炎队列的纵向数据进行了分析,该队列是一项前瞻性多中心早期 RA 研究,参与者自我认定为原住民或白人种族。在人群组之间对比了疾病表现时的特征、预后因素、缓解频率和疾病修正治疗策略。使用线性混合模型估计了 5 年内疾病活动指标的变化率。
基线时,2173 名参与者(100 名原住民和 2073 名白人)的平均症状持续时间(179±91 天)、28 关节疾病活动评分(DAS28;4.87±1.48)和健康评估问卷(HAQ;0.88±0.68)评分相似。与预后不良相关的因素在原住民参与者中更为常见,但两组间疾病修正治疗的选择和治疗升级的频率相似。与白人参与者相比,原住民参与者达到 DAS28 缓解的频率较低(调整后的优势比 0.39[95%置信区间 0.25-0.62])。结果主要是由于原住民参与者的肿胀关节计数改善较慢,患者整体评分无显著改善。原住民患者的疼痛水平仍然较高。
与白人患者相比,原住民早期 RA 患者的疾病结局更差。这可能反映了未测量的生物学差异以及由健康决定因素导致的预后因素中的不平等。应考虑在不同背景下应用当前治疗策略的适宜性。