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Work participation is reduced during the development of RA, months before clinical arthritis manifests

Authors :
Cleo Rogier
Pascal H P de Jong
Elise van Mulligen
Annette H M van der Helm-van Mil
Rheumatology
Source :
Rheumatology, Rheumatology, 61(6), 2583-2589. OXFORD UNIV PRESS, Rheumatology (United Kingdom), 61(6), 2583-2589. Oxford University Press
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, 2022.

Abstract

Objectives We investigated whether work participation is affected in patients with arthralgia during transition to RA. Arthralgia patients with symptom resolution and early RA patients at diagnosis were used as a reference. Methods Three groups of patients were studied: arthralgia patients converting to RA (n = 114), arthralgia patients with spontaneous symptom resolution (n = 57), and early RA patients (n = 617). Both presenteeism (i.e. working while sick, scale 0–10) and absenteeism (i.e. sick leave) were taken into account. Work ability 1 year prior to clinical arthritis was estimated (in absolute numbers). The course of work restriction over time was studied using linear mixed models (β coefficient; delta per month) within each patient group. Results One-year prior to the development of clinical arthritis, mean presenteeism was 7.0 (95% CI 5.8, 8.1) in patients with arthralgia, indicating 30% loss, and further worsened to 6.1 (95% CI 5.3, 6.6) at RA diagnosis, thus indicating 39% loss. In early RA patients, presenteeism improved over time after DMARD initiation (β 0.052 per month 95% CI 0.042, 0.061, P Conclusion In the months preceding RA, presenteeism was already apparent, and it worsened further during progression to clinical arthritis and diagnosis. This underlines the relevance of the symptomatic pre-RA phase for patients. The observed reversibility in arthralgia patients with symptom resolution may suggest that intervention in pre-RA could improve work participation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14620332 and 14620324
Volume :
61
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Rheumatology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0ede6bbdada0dbcfbe79e0dadfb86b47