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RA Therapy: Still a Lot of Mountain Left to Climb


 

EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF RHEUMATOLOGY

ATLANTA – Getting to the place in rheumatoid arthritis therapy where remission is a possibility has been much like the process of conquering a treacherous mountain, according to Dr. Duncan Porter.

Early climbers struggled and failed, but lessons were learned, better equipment was developed, and those who followed in the footsteps of the pioneers achieved what was once thought to be impossible.

"In rheumatology, we have had our own mountain to climb: Twenty years ago we were still puttering around in the foothills with symptom control, through the ’80s and ’90s we were developing increasing evidence that confirmed that conventional disease-modifying drugs ... truly did modify disease activity, but it’s been only recently that we’ve come to focus on the possibility of achieving remission," he said at the annual meeting of the American College of Rheumatology.

Now the top of the mountain is being reached "a good deal more often and a good deal more quickly," he said, citing findings from the Dutch Rheumatoid Arthritis Monitoring (DREAM) cohort study, which were also presented at the meeting, showing that in 64% of 534 patients with newly diagnosed RA, remission was rapidly achieved with a tight control treatment strategy (Arthritis Rheum. 2010;62[supple.]:abstract 662).

"I think the reason we’re getting there is because we’ve got better equipment, so we’ve got more drugs to employ," Dr. Porter said, adding that although the "better equipment" includes biologics, the improvements are primarily due to the new strategies of care.

"It’s how we attack the mountain, it’s how we deploy the drugs that we have, that has yielded the greatest improvements in outcome," said Dr. Porter of the University of Glasgow (Scotland).

The treatment strategies he discussed included intensive management, treatment to target, combination disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drug (DMARD) strategies, and remission induction.

Although intensive management and treatment to target often overlap, they are not the same, he stressed.

Intensive management, using monthly patient visits, liberal intramuscular and intra-articular steroid injections, escalation of therapy for persistent disease, and step-up dosing, has been shown to be highly effective for inducing remission. In the TICORA (Tight Control for Rheumatoid Arthritis) study (Lancet 2004;364:263-9), for example, 65% of patients achieved remission, compared with 16% of patients who did not receive intensive management.

Treatment to target was a component of that study, but treatment to target doesn’t necessarily include intensive management components, Dr. Porter explained, adding, "I think that may be significant."

Nonetheless, a recent literature review concluded that although few studies have used a randomized approach to test the value of treatment to target strategies, there is "unanimous" and "compelling" evidence that targeted approaches are of benefit (Ann. Rheum. Dis. 2010;69:638-43).

When using a treatment to target strategy, it is important to measure progress toward the target and to adjust therapy accordingly based on clinical judgment. Targets can be based on disease activity scores, or they can be based on remission, ultrasound findings, or biomarkers.

"If nothing else, using [the] disease activity score and applying it to treat to target and intensive management strategies has simply been proven to work," Dr. Porter said, adding that "starting [patients] on methotrexate and sending them away for 6 months is no longer acceptable."

Because most studies use a constant dose of the study drug, interpretation in terms of treatment to target strategies can be difficult, as that’s not the way treatment to target works, and it’s not the way most physicians practice, he said.

"Keeping that in mind is critical if we’re to ... come to the best strategy," he added.

One area where it is important to make a distinction between intensive management and treatment to target is with the third strategy Dr. Porter discussed: the combined use of DMARDs. These can include step-up, step-down, and parallel therapy.

In the Bone Estrogen Strength Training (BEST) study, for example, treatment to target, but not intensive management, was used. Four strategies were evaluated, including sequential monotherapy, step-up combination therapy, initial combination therapy plus steroids, and initial biologic therapy.

At 2 years, the groups were identical, and importantly, 39% of patients had sustained low disease activity on monotherapy (Arthritis Rheum. 2005;52:3381-90).

"I think that’s quite important if we’re to avoid overtreating patients with multiple drugs when they will just do fine on one drug alone," he said.

Other studies have compared various combinations, and showed that nothing is lost in waiting to see whether combination therapy versus monotherapy is needed. As for the use of biologics, the decision must be based on the complex synthesis of knowledge about efficacy, toxicity, and cost.

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