Adding ultrasound to treat-to-target shows no benefit in achieving clinical remission nor in slowing radiographic progression in rheumatoid arthritis: results from a multicenter prospective cohort

Alexandre Sepriano, Sofia Ramiro, Robert Landewé, Désirée van der Heijde, Sarah Ohrndorf, Olivier FitzGerald, Marina Backhaus, Maggie Larché, Joanne Homik, Alain Saraux, Hilde B. Hammer, Lene Terslev, Mikkel Østergaard, Gerd Burmester, Bernard Combe, Maxime Dougados, Carol Hitchon, Gilles Boire, Robert G. Lambert, Rana DadashovaJoel Paschke, Edna J. Hutchings, Walter P. Maksymowych

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Objective: To assess whether using ultrasound (US) in addition to clinical information versus only clinical information in a treat-to-target (T2T) strategy leads to more clinical remission and to less radiographic progression in RA. Methods: Patients with RA from the 2-year prospective BIODAM cohort were included. Clinical and US data (US7-score) were collected every 3 months and hands and feet radiographs every 6 months. At each visit, it was decided whether patients were treated according to the clinical definition of T2T with DAS44 remission as benchmark (T2T-DAS44). T2T-DAS44 was correctly applied if: (i) DAS44 remission had been achieved or (ii) if not, treatment was intensified. A T2T strategy also considering US data (T2T-DAS44-US) was correctly applied if: (i) both DAS44 and US remission (synovitis-score < 2, Doppler-score = 0) were present; or (ii) if not, treatment was intensified. The effect of T2T-DAS44-US on attaining clinical remission and on change in Sharp-van der Heijde score compared to T2T-DAS44 was analysed. Results: A total of 1016 visits of 128 patients were included. T2T-DAS44 was correctly followed in 24% of visits and T2T-DAS44-US in 41%. DAS44 < 1.6 was achieved in 39% of visits. Compared to T2T-DAS44, using the T2T-DAS44-US strategy resulted in a 41% lower likelihood of DAS44 remission [OR (95% CI): 0.59 (0.40;0.87)] and had no effect on radiographic progression [β(95% CI): 0.11 (− 0.16;0.39)] assessed at various intervals up to 12 months later. Conclusion: Our results do not suggest a benefit of using the US7-score in addition to clinical information as a T2T benchmark compared to clinical information alone. (Table presented.).

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1833–1844
JournalClinical Rheumatology
Volume43
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - Apr 2024

Keywords

  • Rheumatoid arthritis
  • Treat-to-target
  • Ultrasound

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Adding ultrasound to treat-to-target shows no benefit in achieving clinical remission nor in slowing radiographic progression in rheumatoid arthritis: results from a multicenter prospective cohort'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this