Session Information
Session Type: Poster Session B
Session Time: 9:00AM-10:30AM
Background/Purpose: Cross-sectional studies have shown that rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is more prevalent among people with a lower educational attainment. To date, no longitudinal data are present on educational attainment of patients in the at-risk phase of RA: clinically suspect arthralgia (CSA). We aimed to analyze the association between educational attainment and progression from CSA to inflammatory arthritis (IA), and to perform mediation analysis with subclinical joint-inflammation to elucidate pathways of this association.
Methods: 521 consecutive patients from the Leiden CSA-cohort were followed for IA-development during median 25 months. Educational attainment was defined as low (lower secondary vocational education), intermediate, or high (college/university education). Subclinical joint-inflammation was measured at presentation with a unilateral contrast enhanced 1.5T-MRI of hand and foot. Cox-regression was used to analyze IA-development per educational attainment. A three-step mediation analysis evaluated whether subclinical joint-inflammation was intermediary in the path between educational attainment and IA-development, before and after age-correction. Association between educational attainment and IA-development was verified in the independent CSA-cohort of Rotterdam.
Results: Low educational attainment was associated with increased IA-development (HR=2.35, 95%CI=1.27-4.33, p=0.006; Figure 1A), independent of BMI and current smoking-status. Furthermore, patients with a low educational attainment had higher levels of subclinical joint-inflammation, which also associated with IA-development. Partial mediation effect of subclinical joint-inflammation was observed in the relationship between educational attainment and IA-development. Low educational attainment was associated with increased IA-development in the validation CSA-cohort as well (HR=5.72, 95%CI=1.36-24.08, p=0.017; Figure 1B).
Conclusion: This is the first study providing evidence that lower educational attainment is associated with a higher risk of progressing from arthralgia to IA. This effect was partially mediated by subclinical joint-inflammation.
To cite this abstract in AMA style:
Khidir S, Boeren A, Boonen A, de Jong P, van Mulligen E, van der Helm-van Mil A. Clinically Suspect Arthralgia Patients with a Low Educational Attainment Have an Increased Risk to Develop Inflammatory Arthritis [abstract]. Arthritis Rheumatol. 2022; 74 (suppl 9). https://acrabstracts.org/abstract/clinically-suspect-arthralgia-patients-with-a-low-educational-attainment-have-an-increased-risk-to-develop-inflammatory-arthritis/. Accessed .« Back to ACR Convergence 2022
ACR Meeting Abstracts - https://acrabstracts.org/abstract/clinically-suspect-arthralgia-patients-with-a-low-educational-attainment-have-an-increased-risk-to-develop-inflammatory-arthritis/