Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
University of Massachusetts School of Medicine, Worcester, and Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts.
Arthritis Rheumatol. 2018 Jan;70(1):18-29. doi: 10.1002/art.40346. Epub 2017 Dec 7.
To investigate whether weight change during the early rheumatoid arthritis (RA) period is associated with subsequent mortality and to evaluate whether there is an RA-specific effect.
We identified patients with incident RA during the Nurses' Health Study (NHS; 1976-2016) and created a comparison cohort by matching each RA patient with up to 10 non-RA comparators by age and calendar year of the RA diagnosis (index date). To capture weight change around the early RA period ("peri-RA/index"), we used weight measurements collected 2-4 years before and 2-4 years after the index date. We used Cox regression analysis to estimate hazard ratios (HRs) for mortality according to peri-RA/index weight change categories, separately in each cohort and in the combined cohorts, evaluating for an RA-specific effect.
Among 121,701 women in the NHS, 902 patients with incident RA were identified and matched to 7,884 non-RA comparators. In the RA cohort, 371 deaths (41.1%) occurred during a mean follow-up of 17.0 years after the early RA period, and 2,303 deaths (29.2%) occurred in the comparison cohort during a mean follow-up of 18.4 years. Weight loss of >30 pounds during the peri-RA period had a hazard ratio (HR) for mortality of 2.78 (95% confidence interval [95% CI] 1.58-4.89) compared to stable weight; results in the comparison cohort were similar (HR 2.16, 95% CI 1.61-2.88). A weight gain of >30 pounds had no association with mortality in patients with RA (HR 1.45, 95% CI 0.69-3.07) or comparators (HR 1.19, 95% CI 0.89-1.59). For mortality, there was no statistically significant interaction between RA/comparator status and weight change category (P = 0.68).
Severe weight loss during the early RA period was associated with an increased subsequent mortality risk for women with and those without RA. These results extend prior observations by including non-RA comparators and finding no protective association between weight gain and mortality, providing evidence against an RA-specific obesity paradox for mortality.
探讨类风湿关节炎(RA)早期体重变化是否与随后的死亡率相关,并评估是否存在 RA 特异性效应。
我们在护士健康研究(NHS)中确定了在 1976 年至 2016 年期间发生的 RA 患者,并通过年龄和 RA 诊断的日历年份(索引日期)为每位 RA 患者匹配最多 10 名非 RA 对照者,创建了一个对照队列。为了捕获 RA 早期阶段(“peri-RA/index”)的体重变化,我们使用索引日期前 2-4 年和后 2-4 年收集的体重测量值。我们使用 Cox 回归分析分别在每个队列和联合队列中根据 peri-RA/index 体重变化类别估计死亡率的风险比(HR),评估 RA 特异性效应。
在 NHS 的 121,701 名女性中,确定了 902 名患有 RA 的患者,并与 7,884 名非 RA 对照者匹配。在 RA 队列中,在 RA 早期阶段后平均随访 17.0 年期间发生了 371 例死亡(41.1%),而在对照队列中,在平均随访 18.4 年期间发生了 2,303 例死亡(29.2%)。与体重稳定相比,peri-RA 期间体重减轻>30 磅的死亡风险比(HR)为 2.78(95%置信区间[95%CI]1.58-4.89);对照队列的结果相似(HR 2.16,95%CI 1.61-2.88)。RA 患者(HR 1.45,95%CI 0.69-3.07)或对照者(HR 1.19,95%CI 0.89-1.59)体重增加>30 磅与死亡率无关。对于死亡率,RA/对照者状态与体重变化类别之间没有统计学显著的交互作用(P=0.68)。
RA 早期严重体重减轻与 RA 患者和非 RA 患者的随后死亡率增加相关。这些结果通过纳入非 RA 对照者并发现体重增加与死亡率之间没有保护关联,为死亡率的 RA 特异性肥胖悖论提供了证据。