Serostatus May Modify RA Activity–CV Link - Summary - MDSpire

Serostatus May Modify RA Activity–CV Link

  • By

  • Andrea Surnit

  • July 15, 2026

  • 4 min

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Objective:

To investigate the association between rheumatoid arthritis (RA) disease activity and the risk of major adverse cardiovascular events, considering patients' serostatus.

Approach:
  • Study Design: Data from 3,952 patients with prevalent RA and no established cardiovascular disease were analyzed, following them from enrollment until a first major adverse cardiovascular event, death, migration, or censoring.
  • Outcome Measures: The primary outcome included nonfatal myocardial infarction, nonfatal stroke, or cardiovascular death, with disease activity measured using the Disease Activity Score in 28 joints with C-reactive protein (DAS28-CRP).
  • Statistical Analysis: Adjusted analyses were performed to assess the relationship between baseline DAS28-CRP and the hazard of cardiovascular events, accounting for demographic and cardiovascular risk factors.
Key Findings:
  • Each 1-unit increase in baseline DAS28-CRP was associated with an 18% higher hazard of a first major adverse cardiovascular event.
  • 184 patients experienced a first major adverse cardiovascular event during 22,981 patient-years of follow-up.
  • Higher DAS28-CRP scores were linked to cardiovascular events in patients negative for both rheumatoid factor (RF) and anticitrullinated protein antibody (ACPA), and those positive for both, while associations in the single-positive groups did not reach statistical significance.
Interpretation:

Combined serostatus may influence the relationship between inflammatory activity and cardiovascular outcomes in RA patients.

Limitations:
  • Disease activity and cardiovascular risk factors were assessed only at enrollment, limiting the ability to account for changes over time.
  • The study lacked detailed information on RF and ACPA titers, isotypes, and specificities.
  • Cardiovascular events were not centrally adjudicated, and recruitment bias may have been introduced.
Conclusion:

Serostatus may modify the association between RA disease activity and cardiovascular risk.

Sources:

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