Publication | Open Access
Judging disease activity in clinical practice in rheumatoid arthritis: first step in the development of a disease activity score.
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References
1990
Year
Rheumatologists primarily used articular symptoms to decide whether to initiate or continue slow‑acting antirheumatic drugs, which served as a proxy for disease activity. In a prospective study of 113 early‑RA patients, the authors defined high and low disease activity based on treatment decisions, then applied factor, discriminant, and regression analyses to derive a nine‑variable disease‑activity score comprising the Ritchie index, swollen joints, ESR, and general health.
An investigation of clinical and laboratory variables which might form the basis for judging disease activity in clinical practice was made by six rheumatologists in a prospective study of up to three years9 duration of 113 patients with early rheumatoid arthritis. Decisions to start treatment with slow acting antirheumatic drugs were equated with moments of high disease activity. If treatment with slow acting antirheumatic drugs was not started or if the slow acting antirheumatic drug remained unchanged for at least one year or if treatment was stopped because of disease remission, this was equated with periods of low disease activity. Two groups, one with high and one with low disease activity according to the above criteria, were formed. Factor analysis was performed to enable easy handling of the large number of clinical and laboratory variables without loss of information; this resulted in five factors. Next, discriminant analysis was done to determine to what extent each factor contributed to discrimination between the two groups of differing disease activity. Finally, a multiple regression analysis was carried out to determine which laboratory and clinical variables underlie the factors of the discriminant function, resulting in a 9disease activity score9. This score consisted of the following variables: Ritchie index, swollen joints, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, and general health, in declining importance. The rheumatologists9 decisions to prescribe slow acting antirheumatic drugs, or not, were mainly based on articular symptoms.
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