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Abstract Number: 1690

Improvement of Digital Ulcerative Disease in Patients with Systemic Sclerosis Is Associated with Better Functional Prognosis

Patrick Carpentier1, Catherine Lok-Charles2, Pierre Clerson3, Virginie Gressin4, Eric Hachulla5, Alice Berezne6, Elizabeth Diot7, Aurelie Khau VAN Kien8, Patrick Jego9, Christian Agard10, Anne Bénédicte Duval Modeste11, Agnès Sparsa12, Eve Puzenat13, Marie-Aleth Richard14 and Luc Mouthon15, 1Vascular Medicine, La Tronche Hospital, Grenoble, France, 2Amiens University Hospital, Amiens, France, 3Orgametrie, Roubaix, France, 4Actelion France, Actelion France, Paris, France, 5Internal Medicine, National Scleroderma Centre, Lille CEDEX, France, 6Paris Descartes University, Internal Medicine department, Cochin Hospital, Paris, France, 7Department of Internal Medicine, Hôpital Bretonneau, Centre Hospitalier Régional Universitaire de Tours, Tours, France, Tours, France, 8Montpelier University Hospital, Department of Internal Medicine, Montpelier, France, 9Department of Internal Medicine, Rennes University Hospital, Rennes, France, 10Internal Medicine Department, Nantes University Hospital, Nantes, France, 11Rouen University Hospital - Clinical Dermatology, Rouen, France, 12Dupuytren Regional University Hospital-, Limoges, France, 13Besançon University Hospital, Besançon, France, 14Dermatology, Marseille, Paris, France, 15National Referral Center for Rare Systemic Autoimmune Diseases, Hôpital Cochin, AP–HP, Université Paris Descartes, Paris, Paris, France

Meeting: 2014 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting

Keywords: systemic sclerosis and ulcers

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Session Information

Title: Systemic Sclerosis, Fibrosing Syndromes and Raynaud's - Clinical Aspects and Therapeutics: Systemic Sclerosis, Diagnostic and Therapeutic Aspects

Session Type: Abstract Submissions (ACR)

Background/Purpose

Ischemic digital ulcers (DU) represent a major complication of systemic sclerosis (SSc) leading to hand disability. We investigated the impact of controlling the ulcerative disease on hand disability and quality of life in SSc patients following one year  of bosentan treatment

Methods

ECLIPSE is a 2-year prospective, observational study. Patients with SSc who experienced at least one DU in previous year and received bosentan to prevent occurrence of new DU were included between October 2009 and March 2011.Demographical and clinical data were collected at inclusion and at 1 year, as well as disability scores (Cochin hand function scale (CHFS), health assessment questionnaire disability index (HAQ-DI)), pain score (Visual Analog Scale), and quality of life (SF-36). A controlled ulcerative disease was defined by healing of all DU present at inclusion and the absence of new ulcer between inclusion and one-year follow-up. Data are presented as means ± standard deviations.

Results

Follow-up data were available at one year for 120 patients out of the 190 included patients. Patients’ characteristics were similar to those of the overall cohort. Mean age at inclusion and at SSc diagnosis were 54±15 and 44±15 years, respectively. SSc was diffuse in 42% of the cases. At inclusion, patients had been receiving bosentan for 15.6±22.1 months. During the one-year follow-up, 46 (38%) patients experienced an episode of new DU and the incidence of the event was 0.6 event/patient-year [95% confidence interval: 0.44-0.81]. Nevertheless, the proportion of patients with at least one DU decreased from 61% to 22% and the number of DU per patient decreased from 1.4±1.8 to 0.6±1.6 (p < 0.0001). In parallel disability scores decreased from 29.4±20.1 to 25.0±20.2 (p=0.005) on the CHFS and from 0.96±0.68 to 0.88±0.73(p=0.04) for the HAQ-DI; the pain score decreased from 4.3±3.1 to 2.9±2.8 (p<0.0001). Improvements in the physical and mental components of the SF-36 were non-significant except for bodily pain (p=0.04) and mental health (p = 0.01).

Patients with a controlled ulcerative disease (n =58) significantly improved CHFS (p = 0.04), HAQ-DI (p = 0.04), and physical component of the SF-36 (p = 0.05) compared with patients with an uncontrolled disease (n =62).

During the one-year follow-up, 21 (17%) patients discontinued bosentan for an adverse event including 5 patients presenting elevated aminotransferases

Conclusion In patients with SSc receiving bosentan, a controlled ulcerative disease is associated with a significant attenuation of disability.


Disclosure:

P. Carpentier,
None;

C. Lok-Charles,
None;

P. Clerson,
None;

V. Gressin,
None;

E. Hachulla,
None;

A. Berezne,
None;

E. Diot,
None;

A. Khau VAN Kien,
None;

P. Jego,
None;

C. Agard,
None;

A. B. Duval Modeste,
None;

A. Sparsa,
None;

E. Puzenat,
None;

M. A. Richard,
None;

L. Mouthon,
None.

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