1. IL-6 inhibitors and JAK inhibitors as favourable treatment options for patients with anaemia and rheumatoid arthritis: ANSWER cohort study.
- Author
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Nakayama, Yoichi, Watanabe, Ryu, Yamamoto, Wataru, Ebina, Kosuke, Hirano, Toru, Kotani, Takuya, Shiba, Hideyuki, Katayama, Masaki, Son, Yonsu, Amuro, Hideki, Onishi, Akira, Jinno, Sadao, Hara, Ryota, Murakami, Kosaku, Murata, Koichi, Ito, Hiromu, Tanaka, Masao, Matsuda, Shuichi, Morinobu, Akio, and Hashimoto, Motomu
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INTERLEUKINS , *DISEASE progression , *RESEARCH , *DATABASES , *HEMOGLOBINS , *SCIENTIFIC observation , *MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems , *JANUS kinases , *ANTIRHEUMATIC agents , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *RHEUMATOID arthritis , *ANEMIA , *TUMOR necrosis factors , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *KAPLAN-Meier estimator , *RESEARCH funding , *T cells , *PROPORTIONAL hazards models , *CHEMICAL inhibitors , *DISEASE complications - Abstract
Objectives Anaemia, a common comorbidity of RA, is related to high disease activity and poor prognosis. It is unknown which biologic/targeted synthetic (b/ts)-DMARDs are optimal for patients with anaemia and RA in regulating anaemia and controlling disease activity. Methods We investigated the change in haemoglobin (Hb) levels, drug retention rates and disease activities after the administration of b/ts-DMARDs with different modes of action [TNF inhibitors (TNFis), immunoglobulin fused with cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen (CTLA-4-Ig), IL-6 receptor inhibitors (IL-6Ris) and Janus kinase inhibitors (JAKis)] in patients with RA stratified by baseline Hb levels using the multicentre observational registry for patients with RA in Japan (ANSWER cohort). Results A total of 2093 patients with RA were classified into three groups based on tertiles of the baseline Hb levels (Hblow, anaemic; Hbint, intermediate; Hbhigh, non-anaemic). IL-6Ri increased Hb levels in all groups (the mean change at 12 months in Hblow was +1.5 g/dl, Hbint +0.7 g/dl and Hbhigh +0.1 g/dl). JAKis increased the Hb level in patients with anaemia and RA and retained or decreased the Hb level in non-anaemic patients (the mean change at 12 months in Hblow was +0.6 g/dl, Hbint 0 g/dl and Hbhigh −0.3 g/dl). In patients with anaemia and RA, overall adjusted 3-year drug retention rates were higher in JAKi followed by IL-6Ri, CTLA4-Ig and TNFi (78.6%, 67.9%, 61.8% and 50.8%, respectively). Change of disease activity at 12 months was not different among different b/ts-DMARDs treatments. Conclusion IL-6Ri and JAKi can effectively treat patients with anaemia and RA in a real-world setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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