Department of Medicine, Rheumatology, School of Medicine, Halic University, Istanbul, Turkey.
Medicine (Baltimore). 2024 Nov 29;103(48):e40753. doi: 10.1097/MD.0000000000040753.
Rheumatic diseases present unique challenges in the elderly, with changes in the immune system contributing to varied clinical presentations. More individuals are now living with chronic diseases due to greater life expectancy, but there is a lack of real-world data about rheumatic diseases and comorbidities in older people. This study aimed to investigate disease types, comorbidities, treatments, and mortality in geriatric patients in comparison to non-geriatric patients at a rheumatology clinic. This retrospective observational cohort study reviewed the medical records of 2610 patients from January 2021 to January 2024 at 2 branches of a private hospital's rheumatology clinics. Demographic information and data on rheumatic diseases, noninflammatory conditions, treatments, comorbidities, and mortality were collected, and geriatric patients were compared to non-geriatric patients. Geriatric patients (n = 515) had a significantly higher prevalence of rheumatoid arthritis (50.6% vs 28.8%, P < .001), polymyalgia rheumatica (11.1% vs 0.2%, P < .001), and crystal arthritis (19.6% vs 8.8%, P < .001), with more frequent geriatric-onset cases. Osteoarthritis was also more prevalent in geriatric patients (51.2% vs 11.3%, P < .001), while fibromyalgia was more common in the non-geriatric group (15.9% vs 4.1%, P < .001). Geriatric patients experienced higher rates of comorbidities, including hypertension (72.4% vs 17.8%, P < .001), diabetes (33.6% vs 12.1%, P < .001), and osteoporosis (64.9% vs 35.4%, P < .001). These patients used more corticosteroids (74.5% vs 44%, P < .001), and conventional synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (62.4% vs 49.4%, P < .001) but fewer biological disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (9.2% vs 23.1%, P < .001). Mortality rates were significantly higher in geriatric patients (6% vs 0.3%), with cancer (P = .001), ischemic heart disease (P = .04), heart failure (P = .01), chronic kidney disease (P = .02), and interstitial lung disease (P = .01) being associated with increased mortality. Geriatric rheumatology should receive greater focus in future research to help address the anticipated increases in demand and to develop tailored management strategies for elderly patients with rheumatic diseases and comorbidities.
风湿性疾病在老年人中带来独特的挑战,免疫系统的变化导致了不同的临床表现。由于预期寿命的延长,更多的人患有慢性疾病,但关于老年人的风湿性疾病和合并症的真实世界数据仍然缺乏。本研究旨在调查与风湿病诊所的非老年患者相比,老年患者的疾病类型、合并症、治疗和死亡率。这项回顾性观察队列研究回顾了 2021 年 1 月至 2024 年 1 月期间 2 家私立医院风湿病诊所的 2610 名患者的医疗记录。收集了人口统计学信息和风湿性疾病、非炎症性疾病、治疗、合并症和死亡率的数据,并将老年患者与非老年患者进行了比较。老年患者(n=515)患类风湿关节炎(50.6%比 28.8%,P<0.001)、巨细胞动脉炎(11.1%比 0.2%,P<0.001)和晶体性关节炎(19.6%比 8.8%,P<0.001)的比例明显更高,且更常出现老年发病病例。骨关节炎在老年患者中也更为常见(51.2%比 11.3%,P<0.001),而纤维肌痛在非老年组中更为常见(15.9%比 4.1%,P<0.001)。老年患者的合并症发生率更高,包括高血压(72.4%比 17.8%,P<0.001)、糖尿病(33.6%比 12.1%,P<0.001)和骨质疏松症(64.9%比 35.4%,P<0.001)。这些患者使用更多的皮质类固醇(74.5%比 44%,P<0.001)和传统的合成疾病修饰抗风湿药物(62.4%比 49.4%,P<0.001),但使用生物疾病修饰抗风湿药物的比例较低(9.2%比 23.1%,P<0.001)。老年患者的死亡率明显更高(6%比 0.3%),癌症(P=0.001)、缺血性心脏病(P=0.04)、心力衰竭(P=0.01)、慢性肾脏病(P=0.02)和间质性肺病(P=0.01)与死亡率升高有关。未来的研究应更加关注老年风湿病学,以帮助应对预期需求的增加,并为老年风湿性疾病和合并症患者制定量身定制的管理策略。