University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
University of Pennsylvania and Philadelphia Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Arthritis Care Res (Hoboken). 2021 Nov;73(11):1597-1605. doi: 10.1002/acr.24382. Epub 2021 Oct 7.
Glucocorticoids are recommended for short-term use in rheumatoid arthritis (RA), but many patients continue receiving long-term therapy. We evaluated the variability in glucocorticoid prescribing across rheumatologists to inform interventions to limit long-term glucocorticoid use to the lowest dose necessary.
Two cohorts were created using Medicare data from 2006 to 2015. Using cohort 1 (RA patients receiving disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs [DMARDs]), we calculated each rheumatologist's "provider preference" for glucocorticoids (frequency of use compared to other providers), using the ratio of observed to expected number of patients receiving glucocorticoids to account for case mix. In cohort 2 (RA patients receiving stable DMARD therapy), we evaluated whether provider preference for glucocorticoids could independently predict use of ≥5 mg/day of glucocorticoids 6-9 months after initiation of DMARD therapy.
Using cohort 1 (1,272,644 yearly observations; 385,597 patients), we calculated provider preference among 6,875 rheumatologists (28,936 yearly observations). Provider preference was highly variable, with physicians at the lowest and upper quartiles prescribing glucocorticoids 33% less often to 31% more often (25th and 75th percentiles, respectively) than expected. In cohort 2 (155,539 patients receiving stable DMARD therapy), provider preference was strongly associated with glucocorticoid use ≥5 mg/day at 6-9 months, with a predicted probability of use of 22% (95% confidence interval [95% CI] 21.7-22.7) versus 11% (95% CI 10.2-10.9) for a patient seeing a provider in the highest versus lowest quintile of preference.
Glucocorticoid prescribing for RA varies greatly among rheumatologists, and provider preference is one of the strongest predictors of a patient's long-term glucocorticoid use. These findings raise quality of care concerns and highlight the need for stronger evidence to guide RA treatment.
糖皮质激素被推荐用于类风湿关节炎(RA)的短期治疗,但许多患者仍继续接受长期治疗。我们评估了风湿病医生之间糖皮质激素处方的变异性,以便为限制长期糖皮质激素使用至最低必要剂量的干预措施提供信息。
使用 2006 年至 2015 年的医疗保险数据创建了两个队列。使用队列 1(接受疾病修饰抗风湿药物 [DMARD] 的 RA 患者),我们计算了每位风湿病医生使用糖皮质激素的“提供者偏好”(与其他提供者相比使用的频率),使用观察到的患者接受糖皮质激素的数量与预期数量的比值来考虑病例组合。在队列 2(接受稳定 DMARD 治疗的 RA 患者)中,我们评估了提供者对糖皮质激素的偏好是否可以独立预测 DMARD 治疗开始后 6-9 个月内使用≥5mg/天的糖皮质激素。
使用队列 1(每年观察 1272644 次;385597 名患者),我们计算了 6875 名风湿病医生(每年观察 28936 次)之间的提供者偏好。提供者偏好差异很大,最低和最高四分位的医生开具糖皮质激素的频率分别低 33%和高 31%(第 25%和第 75%分位数),低于预期。在队列 2(接受稳定 DMARD 治疗的 155539 名患者)中,提供者偏好与 6-9 个月时使用≥5mg/天的糖皮质激素密切相关,使用的预测概率为 22%(95%置信区间[95%CI]21.7-22.7),而在最高五分位与最低五分位的患者中,使用的预测概率为 11%(95%CI 10.2-10.9)。
RA 患者的糖皮质激素处方在风湿病医生之间差异很大,提供者偏好是患者长期使用糖皮质激素的最强预测因素之一。这些发现引发了对医疗质量的关注,并强调了需要更强的证据来指导 RA 治疗。