Clinical trials have shown that in patients with long-standing low disease activity, tapering and/or stopping antirheumatic medication is a realistic option. The objective of this study is to... Show moreClinical trials have shown that in patients with long-standing low disease activity, tapering and/or stopping antirheumatic medication is a realistic option. The objective of this study is to explore patients' opinion about tapering and discontinuing antirheumatic drugs. This qualitative study is based on interviews with 20 patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) about RA treatment and treatment discontinuation through structured interviewing. Interviews were tape-recorded, transcribed verbatim, and screened by three assessors independently for meaning units. Not only positive emotions about drug discontinuation such as hope, happiness, and relief, but also fear and disappointment were mentioned. Some patients expect that drug discontinuation will be possible in other patients and/or themselves, while others do not expect this. The concept of increase in disease activity after discontinuing medication was mentioned, and while patients expect that disease activity will decrease again after restarting medication, they expect that this will take (too much) time. Positive emotions about the option to taper and discontinue antirheumatic medication, with negative expectations is a common combination in these RA patients. In particular, patients expect that disease activity will flare and that improvement upon restarting medication will take time. Patients' expectations and feelings should be addressed before drug tapering is attempted in a clear strategy of continued monitoring of disease activity. Show less
Markusse, I.M.; Dirven, L.; Broek, M. van den; Bijkerk, C.; Han, K.H.; Ronday, H.K.; ... ; Allaart, C.F. 2014
OBJECTIVE\nTo determine whether a multibiomarker disease activity (MBDA) score predicts radiographic damage progression in the subsequent year in patients with early rheumatoid arthritis.\nMETHODS... Show moreOBJECTIVE\nTo determine whether a multibiomarker disease activity (MBDA) score predicts radiographic damage progression in the subsequent year in patients with early rheumatoid arthritis.\nMETHODS\nThere were 180 serum samples available in the BeSt study (trial numbers NTR262, NTR 265): 91 at baseline (84 with radiographs available) and 89 at 1-year followup (81 with radiographs available). Radiographs were assessed using the Sharp/van der Heijde Score (SvdH). Twelve serum biomarkers were measured to determine MBDA scores using a validated algorithm. Receiver-operating curves and Poisson regression analyses were performed, with Disease Activity Score (DAS) and MBDA score as independent variables, and radiographic progression as dependent variable.\nRESULTS\nAt baseline, MBDA scores discriminated more between patients who developed radiographic progression (increase in SvdH ≥ 5 points) and patients who did not [area under the curve (AUC) 0.767, 95% CI 0.639-0.896] than did DAS (AUC 0.521, 95% CI 0.358-0.684). At 1 year, MBDA score had an AUC of 0.691 (95% CI 0.453-0.929) and DAS had an AUC of 0.649 (95% CI 0.417-0.880). Adjusted for anticitrullinated protein antibody status and DAS, higher MBDA scores were associated with an increased risk for SvdH progression [relative risk (RR) 1.039, 95% CI 1.018-1.059 for baseline MBDA score; 1.037, 95% CI 1.009-1.065 for Year 1 MBDA score]. Categorized high MBDA scores were also correlated with SvdH progression (RR for high MBDA score at baseline 3.7; low or moderate MBDA score as reference). At 1 year, high MBDA score gave a RR of 4.6 compared to low MBDA score.\nCONCLUSION\nMBDA scores predict radiographic damage progression at baseline and during disease course. Show less