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Determinants of discordance in patients' and physicians' rating of rheumatoid arthritis disease activity

✍ Scribed by Nasim A. Khan; Horace J. Spencer; Esam Abda; Amita Aggarwal; Rieke Alten; Codrina Ancuta; Daina Andersone; Martin Bergman; Jurgen Craig-Muller; Jacqueline Detert; Lia Georgescu; Laure Gossec; Hisham Hamoud; Johannes W. G. Jacobs; Ieda Maria Magalhaes Laurindo; Maria Majdan; Antonio Naranjo; Sapan Pandya; Christof Pohl; Georg Schett; Zahraa I. Selim; Sergio Toloza; Hisahi Yamanaka; Tuulikki Sokka


Publisher
Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
Year
2012
Tongue
English
Weight
251 KB
Volume
64
Category
Article
ISSN
2151-464X

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Objective

To assess the determinants of patients' (PTGL) and physicians' (MDGL) global assessment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) activity and factors associated with discordance among them.

Methods

A total of 7,028 patients in the Quantitative Standard Monitoring of Patients with RA study had PTGL and MDGL assessed at the same clinic visit on a 0–10‐cm visual analog scale (VAS). Three patient groups were defined: concordant rating group (PTGL and MDGL within Β±2 cm), higher patient rating group (PTGL exceeding MDGL by >2 cm), and lower patient rating group (PTGL less than MDGL by >2 cm). Multivariable regression analysis was used to identify determinants of PTGL and MDGL and their discordance.

Results

The mean Β± SD VAS scores for PTGL and MDGL were 4.01 Β± 2.70 and 2.91 Β± 2.37, respectively. Pain was overwhelmingly the single most important determinant of PTGL, followed by fatigue. In contrast, MDGL was most influenced by swollen joint count (SJC), followed by erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) and tender joint count (TJC). A total of 4,454 (63.4%), 2,106 (30%), and 468 (6.6%) patients were in the concordant, higher, and lower patient rating groups, respectively. Odds of higher patient rating increased with higher pain, fatigue, psychological distress, age, and morning stiffness, and decreased with higher SJC, TJC, and ESR. Lower patient rating odds increased with higher SJC, TJC, and ESR, and decreased with lower fatigue levels.

Conclusion

Nearly 36% of patients had discordance in RA activity assessment from their physicians. Sensitivity to the β€œdisease experience” of patients, particularly pain and fatigue, is warranted for effective care of RA.


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