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Abstract Number: L05

Treatment-Naïve, Early Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients Demonstrate Reversible Abnormalities of Vascular Function on Cardiac MRI with RA Therapy with Preliminary Suggestion of Greater Improvement with Anti-TNF Compared to MTX/Conventional Therapy – a First, RCT Derived Longitudinal Study

Maya H. Buch1, Bara Erhayiem2, Graham Fent2, Paul Baxter3, Elizabeth M.A. Hensor4, Adam McDiarmid2, Peter Swoboda5, Ananth Kidambi2, David Ripley2, Pankaj Garg2, Sarah Horton4, Raluca Bianca Dumitru4, Kamran Naraghi4, John Greenwood6, Paul Emery7, Sue Pavitt8 and Sven Plein2, 1Leeds Institute of Rheumatic & Musculosekeltal Medicine, University of Leeds & NIHR Biomedical Research Centre, Leeds, United Kingdom, 2Multidisciplinary Cardiovascular Research Centre, Leeds Institute of Cardiovascular & Metabolic Medicine, University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom, 3Leeds Institute of Cardiovascular & Metabolic Medicine, University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom, 4Leeds Institute of Rheumatic & Musculoskeletal Medicine, University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom, 5Leeds Institute of Cardiovascular And Metabolic Medicine, University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom, 6Leeds Institute of Cardiovascular And Metabolic Medicinee, University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom, 7University of Leeds and NIHR Leeds Biomedical Research Centre, Leeds, United Kingdom, 8Leeds School of Dentistry, University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom

Meeting: 2018 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting

Date of first publication: October 4, 2018

Keywords: anti-TNF therapy, Cardiovascular disease, Late-Breaking 2018, Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), methotrexate (MTX) and rheumatoid arthritis (RA)

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Session Information

Date: Tuesday, October 23, 2018

Title: Late-Breaking Abstract Poster Session

Session Type: ACR Late-breaking Abstract Session

Session Time: 9:00AM-11:00AM

Background/Purpose: We previously reported abnormal cardiac MRI (CMR)-determined aortic stiffness in patients with early, treatment-naive RA1,2. We now report on whether this vascular stiffness is modifiable with RA DMARD therapy, and explore whether TNFi confers additional advantage over MTX csDMARD +/- subsequent escalation to TNFi.

Methods: A sub-grp of patients without CVD from an early (symptoms<1 yr), DMARD-naïve, RA (ACR/EULAR criteria) RCT3 with DAS28≥3.2 were recruited for 3.0T CMR to determine aortic distensibility (AD) at baseline, yrs 1 and 2 at a dedicated cardiology-CMR unit. Patients were randomised to first-line etanercept (ETN)+MTX (grp 1) or MTX/treat-to-target escalation to triple csDMARD, and switch to ETN+MTX at week 24 if failed to achieve clinical remission (grp 2; non-escalated subgrp 2a). At week 48, ETN was stopped, standard of care treatment maintained with observation up to week 96. AD values were natural log (ln) transformed prior to analysis; results are expressed as ratios between groups. Patients with DAS28≥2.6 at wk 48 defined non-responders. Change in AD value from baseline was evaluated in combined grps 1 and 2; between group, and within group (response states) change in AD at 1 and 2 years was compared adjusting for baseline DAS28ESR .

Results: Eighty early RA patients of mean(SD) age 49.4(13.08) and systolic BP 123(16) were recruited. Median(IQR) ESR, CRP and mean(SD) DAS28 were 31(31)mm/hr, 8(23)mg/L and 5.6(1.5) respectively. 66(85%) and 59(76%) patients were ACPA and RF positive respectively. 17(21%) were current smokers.

Table 1 details the analyses, confirming significant reduction in mean AD from baseline to year 1 [3.59 (3.14,4.11) vs 2.99 (2.66,3.36) respectively; p<0.01]. This was maintained at year 2 [3.55(33.09,4.09) vs 2.99(2.66,3.36); p=0.04]. There appeared to be no numerical difference in change at years 1 (and 2, data not shown) when comparing grp 1 vs grp 2, all responders vs non-responders and grp 1 responders vs non-responders (all adjusted for baseline AD, age, sex). To clarify this apparent absence of effect of disease activity as represented by response status, correlation analyses between AUC disease activity and AD at year 1 in the combined grps 1&2, and between grps 1 & 2 also did not identify an association. Planned exploratory comparison of grp 1 ETN responders and grp 2a responders (no ETN exposure) suggested a 16% difference (0.84 (0.60, 1.18), p=0.30).

Conclusion: This first longitudinal CMR treatment-naive ERA RCT cohort demonstrates vascular function abnormalities are modifiable (reduced) upon introduction of RA DMARD therapy. Treatment strategy rather than disease activity appeared to influence AD change; if confirmed in a larger trial this would suggest ETN+MTX confers a greater benefit over standard initial MTX/csDMARD.

References

1.     Erhayiem B, et al. Trials 2014

2.     Erhayiem B, et al. Arthritis & Rheumatology 2015

3.     Dumitru et al. BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders 2016

Table 1

 

 

Comparison

Geometric mean AD (unadjusted)

Ratio (95% CI), P value

Unadjusted

Adjusted for baseline AD

Adjusted for baseline AD, age, sex (± baseline DAS28ESR as applicable)

Combined Group 1 & 2

Baseline

1 year

2.99 (2.66,3.36)

3.59 (3.14,4.11)

1.20 (1.08,1.33), p<0.01

na

na

Group 1

(all n=40)

Group 2

(all n=41)

3.74

3.44

0.91 (0.70,1.21), p=0.54

0.92 (0.76, 1.14) p=0.48

0.92 (0.76, 1.14) p=0.49

Group 1 & 2

non-responders (n=46)

Group 1 & 2 responders (n=35)

3.60

3.58

0.99 (0.76,1.30), p=0.97

0.97 (0.79,1.20)p=0.81

0.97 (0.78, 1.21) p=0.79

Group 1

non-responders (n=20)

Group 1 responders (n=20)

3.66

3.83

1.04 (0.71,1.53), p=0.82

1.00 (0.75, 1.34) p=0.98

1.00 (0.75, 1.36) p=0.96

Group 1

responders (n=20)

Group 2a responders (n=10)

3.83

2.75

0.72 (0.44,1.16), p=0.17

0.82 (0.60, 1.13), p=0.21

0.84 (0.60, 1.18) p=0.30

AUC DAS28

 

 

 

 

 

Group 1 & 2^

 

 

 

1.07(0.79,1.44),p=0.65

1.03(0.82,1.3) p=0.78

1.05(0.83,1.33) p=0.69*

Group 1

(all n=40)

Group 2

(all n=41)

3.75

3.44

0.92(0.7,1.21),

p=0.53

0.93(0.75,1.15) p=0.48

0.92(0.73,1.14) p=0.42*

^Coefficients presented per 100 unit increase in AUC

* Adjusted for baseline AD, age, sex and AUC disease activity

 


Disclosure: M. H. Buch, Pfizer, Inc., 2,Roche, 2,UCB, Inc., 2,AbbVie Inc., 5,Sanofi, 5,Eli Lilly and Co., 5,Sandoz, 5; B. Erhayiem, None; G. Fent, None; P. Baxter, None; E. M. A. Hensor, None; A. McDiarmid, None; P. Swoboda, None; A. Kidambi, None; D. Ripley, None; P. Garg, None; S. Horton, None; R. B. Dumitru, None; K. Naraghi, None; J. Greenwood, None; P. Emery, Bristol-Myers Squibb, AbbVie, Pfizer, MSD, Novartis, Roche and UCB, 5,AbbVie, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Pfizer, MSD and Roche, 2; S. Pavitt, None; S. Plein, None.

To cite this abstract in AMA style:

Buch MH, Erhayiem B, Fent G, Baxter P, Hensor EMA, McDiarmid A, Swoboda P, Kidambi A, Ripley D, Garg P, Horton S, Dumitru RB, Naraghi K, Greenwood J, Emery P, Pavitt S, Plein S. Treatment-Naïve, Early Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients Demonstrate Reversible Abnormalities of Vascular Function on Cardiac MRI with RA Therapy with Preliminary Suggestion of Greater Improvement with Anti-TNF Compared to MTX/Conventional Therapy – a First, RCT Derived Longitudinal Study [abstract]. Arthritis Rheumatol. 2018; 70 (suppl 9). https://acrabstracts.org/abstract/treatment-naive-early-rheumatoid-arthritis-patients-demonstrate-reversible-abnormalities-of-vascular-function-on-cardiac-mri-with-ra-therapy-with-preliminary-suggestion-of-greater-improvement-with-an/. Accessed .
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