Serostatus May Modify RA Activity–CV Link - Summary - MDSpire
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Serostatus May Modify RA Activity–CV Link
Combined rheumatoid factor and anticitrullinated protein antibody status appeared to modify the association between baseline rheumatoid arthritis disease activity and subsequent cardiovascular events in an international observational cohort.
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.
Ten-year observational data showed lower disease activity and functional disability coinciding with broader use of biologic and targeted synthetic therapies.