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Suboptimal early RA management predicts difficult-to-treat RA

Clinical Edge Journal Scan: Rheumatoid Arthritis, November 2022 (1 of 11)

Key clinical point: Failure to initiate methotrexate within 3 months and discontinue glucocorticoids within 6 months during early disease management were associated with difficult-to-treat rheumatoid arthritis (D2T-RA).

Major finding: A significantly lower proportion of patients with D2T-RA had adequate methotrexate treatment duration vs. those with non-D2T-RA (70.8% v. 85.5%; P = .022). Additionally, a significantly higher proportion of patients with D2T-RA vs non-D2T-RA continued glucocorticoids beyond 6 months (70.8% vs 33.8%; P < .001), with a delay of <3 months vs >12 months in methotrexate treatment (odds ratio [OR] 0.3; P = .031) and failure to discontinue glucocorticoids (OR 4.6; P < .001) being significantly associated with D2T-RA.

Study details: Findings are from a retrospective cohort study including 48 patients with D2T-RA and 145 patients with non-D2T-RA.

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Disclosures: This study did not receive any specific funding. The authors declared no conflicts of interest.

Source: Giollo A et al. Early characterisation of difficult-to-treat rheumatoid arthritis by suboptimal initial management A multicentre cohort study. Rheumatology (Oxford). 2022 (Oct 3). Doi: 10.1093/rheumatology/keac563