Ochi Sae, Kato Shigeaki, Leppold Claire, Morita Tomohiro, Tsubokura Masaharu, Oikawa Tomoyoshi, Shineha Ryuzaburo, Kanazawa Yukio, Fujiwara Masatoshi
Department of Internal Medicine, Soma Central Hospital, Fukushima, Japan.
Research Institute of Innovative Medicine (RIIM), Tokiwa Foundation, Fukushima, Japan.
Int J Rheum Dis. 2018 Jun;21(6):1254-1262. doi: 10.1111/1756-185X.13301. Epub 2018 Apr 26.
As status of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is highly affected by environmental factors, a catastrophic disaster may also affect RA activity. Herein we conducted a retrospective cohort study in the disaster area of the 2011 triple disaster in Fukushima, Japan: an earthquake, tsunamis and a nuclear accident.
Clinical records of RA patients who attended a hospital near the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant were collected. For those who underwent whole-body counter testing, internal radiation exposure levels were also collected. As clinical parameters may fluctuate in the absence of a disaster, changes in values before and after the disaster were also compared. Logistic regression was conducted to identify factors affecting RA status.
Fifty-three patients (average age, 64.2 years; females, 83%; average disease duration, 15.7 years) were included in the study. Five patients lived within the no-entry zone, 37 evacuated immediately after the disaster, and four temporarily stopped RA treatment. The proportions of patients who showed worsened tender joint counts, swollen joint counts and rheumatoid factor values were significantly higher after the disaster compared to those before. Among the 16 patients who underwent whole-body counter testing, only one showed a detectable, but negligible, radioactive cesium level. Use of methotrexate was identified as a possible preventive factor for RA exacerbation in this setting.
This is the first study to analyze detailed profiles of RA patients after a disaster. As methotrexate may prevent disease exacerbation, continuity of care for this common chronic disease should be considered in disaster settings.
由于类风湿关节炎(RA)的病情受环境因素影响很大,一场灾难性的灾难可能也会影响RA的活动。在此,我们在日本福岛2011年三重灾难(地震、海啸和核事故)的灾区进行了一项回顾性队列研究。
收集了在福岛第一核电站附近一家医院就诊的RA患者的临床记录。对于那些接受全身计数检测的患者,还收集了体内辐射暴露水平。由于临床参数在无灾难情况下可能会波动,因此还比较了灾难前后各项数值的变化。进行逻辑回归以确定影响RA病情的因素。
本研究纳入了53例患者(平均年龄64.2岁;女性占83%;平均病程15.7年)。5例患者居住在禁区内,37例在灾难发生后立即撤离,4例暂时停止了RA治疗。与灾难前相比,灾难后压痛关节计数、肿胀关节计数和类风湿因子值恶化的患者比例显著更高。在接受全身计数检测的16例患者中,只有1例显示出可检测到但可忽略不计的放射性铯水平。在这种情况下,使用甲氨蝶呤被确定为RA病情加重的一个可能预防因素。
这是第一项分析灾难后RA患者详细情况的研究。由于甲氨蝶呤可能预防疾病加重,在灾难情况下应考虑对这种常见慢性病的持续护理。