Patients lacking classical poor prognostic markers might also benefit from a step-down glucocorticoid bridging scheme in early rheumatoid arthritis: Week 16 results from the randomized multicenter CareRA trial

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Abstract

Introduction: Considering a lack of efficacy data in patients with early rheumatoid arthritis (eRA) presenting without classical markers of poor prognosis, we compared methotrexate (MTX) with or without step-down glucocorticoids in the CareRA trial. Methods: Disease-modifying antirheumatic drug-naïve patients with eRA were stratified into a low-risk group based on prognostic markers that included non-erosiveness, anti-citrullinated protein antibodies and rheumatoid factor negativity and low disease activity (Disease Activity Score in 28 joints based on C-reactive protein (DAS28(CRP)) ≤3.2). Patients were randomized to 15 mg of MTX weekly (MTX with tight step-up (MTX-TSU)) or 15 mg of MTX weekly with prednisone bridging, starting at 30 mg and tapered to 5 mg daily from week 6 (COmbinatie therapie bij Reumatoïde Artritis (COBRA Slim)). A TSU approach was applied. Outcomes assessed were DAS28(CRP)-determined remission, cumulative disease activity, Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ) scores and adverse events (AEs) after 16 treatment weeks. Results: We analyzed 43 COBRA Slim and 47 MTX-TSU patients and found that 65.1% in the COBRA Slim group and 46.8% in the MTX-TSU group reached remission (P=0.081). Mean±standard deviation area under the curve values of DAS28(CRP) were 13.84±4.58 and 11.18±4.25 for the MTX-TSU and COBRA Slim patients, respectively (P=0.006). More COBRA Slim patients had an HAQ score of 0 (51.2% versus 23.4%, P=0.006) at week 16. Therapy-related AEs between groups did not differ. Conclusion: In patients with low-risk eRA, MTX with step-down glucocorticoid bridging seems more efficacious than MTX step-up monotherapy, with a comparable number of AEs observed over the first 16 treatment weeks.

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Verschueren, P., De Cock, D., Corluy, L., Joos, R., Langenaken, C., Taelman, V., … Van Den Bosch, F. (2015). Patients lacking classical poor prognostic markers might also benefit from a step-down glucocorticoid bridging scheme in early rheumatoid arthritis: Week 16 results from the randomized multicenter CareRA trial. Arthritis Research and Therapy, 17(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13075-015-0611-8

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