SAT0056 What Are The Reasons of Discrepancies between Patients and Physicians in Their Perceptions of Rheumatoid Arthritis Disease Activity and What Is The Impact of This Discordance on Remission, Function and Structure at 1 Year? Results from The ESPOIR Cohort

2016 
Background Patients and physicians often differ in their perceptions of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) disease activity, as quantified by the patient9s global assessment (PGA) and by the evaluator9s global assessment (EGA). The quest for understanding the reasons for discrepancies in evaluations of disease activity becomes particularly important in the context of recent recommendations that define Boolean-based ACR EULAR remission as the treatment target. Objectives The objectives of this study were: 1) to explore the extent and reasons for this discordance 2) to determine if this discordance at baseline is associated with RA outcomes at 1 year (remission, function and structure) in early RA in daily clinical practice. Methods Patients: from the French cohort of EA ESPOIR (at least 2 swollen joints for less than 6 months, DMARD naive), fulfilling the ACR-EULAR criteria for RA at baseline Analyses: At baseline, agreement between PGA and EGA (Bland-Altman plot) was assessed. Multivariate linear regression was used to determine the patient and EA features independently associated with discordance (calculated as PGA − EGA). Logistic regression was used to analyze discordance as |PGA − EGA| ≥20. Multivariate logistic models were used to determine if discordance at baseline is associated with remissions (Boolean, SDAI and DAS28), functional stability (HAQ ≤0.5 and deltaHAQ ≤0.25) and absence of radiographic progression (delta Sharp score Results In 645 patients with ERA (mean age=48.8±12.2 years, 77% female, 48.7% ACPA+) agreement was better at both ends of the spectrum, especially for patients with high disease activity. Evaluation of disease activity yielded discordant scores between the patients and their physicians in 30% of our cohort: 153 patients (24%) had higher PGA scores, 41 patients (6%) had higher EGA scores, and 451 patients (70%) had concordant PGA and EGA scores (|PGA − EGA| In multivariate linear regression center-adjusted, higher PGA has been found to be associated with absence of fulfilling ACR 1987 revised criteria for RA (p=0.0005), higher levels of fatigue (p In multivariate analyses, discordance at baseline was not associated with remission, function and structural progression at 1 year. Conclusions In early RA, the discordance between PGA and EGA is multifactorial with objective measures like low SJC and absence of ACR 1987 revised criteria for RA, but also patient reported outcomes like high level of fatigue and low mental status, and environmental factor: living alone. Discordance between PGA and EGA at baseline was not associated with RA outcomes at 1 year. Understanding the reasons for a discordant view of disease activity will help to facilitate the sharing of decision-making in the management of RA. Disclosure of Interest None declared
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