| Literature DB >> 16879719 |
Annette H M van der Helm-van Mil1, Ferdinand C Breedveld, Tom W J Huizinga.
Abstract
With regard to rheumatoid arthritis, remission as currently used in the literature can have two meanings: either a state with persistent absence of clinical and radiological signs of disease activity without being treated for a specific time period, or it may point to a disease state with minimal disease activity during antirheumatic treatment. A risk factor for the first is absence of autoantibodies, with the anti-CCP-antibodies as best predictors, whereas risk factors for achieving a drug-induced state of minimal disease activity are not well defined. These definitions of remission refer to different disease states; therefore, we propose that the term remission is reserved for patients that are not treated with antirheumatic drugs.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16879719 PMCID: PMC1779387 DOI: 10.1186/ar1983
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arthritis Res Ther ISSN: 1478-6354 Impact factor: 5.156
Figure 1Different clinical states that are indicated as remission in the current literature. The 'cure' state necessitates the absence of clinical evidence for arthritis and no progression of radiological damage during a specific time period without the use of disease modifying antirheumatic drugs. In the 'disease state with low disease activity' definition of remission, treatment with disease modifying antirheumatic drugs is allowed and this points to a disease state at the lower end of the continuum of disease activity and signifies that a patient is optimaly treated.
Figure 2Multiple hit model for the development of rhematoid arthritis.
Definition of remission as treatment outcome/disease state in RA
| Remission criteria | Definition |
| ACR criteria | For clinical remission, a minimum of five of the following items must be present for at least two subsequent months: |
| Morning stiffness <15 minutes | |
| No fatigue | |
| No joint pain by history | |
| No joint tenderness or pain on motion | |
| No soft-tissue swelling in joints or tender sheats | |
| ESR < 30 mm/1st hour in women or < 20 mm/1st hour in men | |
| Disease activity score criteria | DAS remission defined as a score <1.6 using a compound index of the following measures: |
| Ritchie articular index of tender joints | |
| 44 swollen joint count | |
| ESR | |
| Patient's assessment of general health (measured on a 100 mm visual analogue scale) | |
| DAS28 remission defined as a score <2.6 using a compound index of the following measures: | |
| 28-joint count for tender and swollen joints | |
| ESR | |
| Patient's assessment of general health | |
| FDA criteria | Remission |
| Requires achieving ACR clinical remission and absence of radiological progression (Larsen or Sharp-van der Heijde method) over a continuous 6 month period in the absence of DMARDs | |
| Complete clinical remission | |
| Same as remission, but while continuing DMARD therapy | |
| Major clinical response | |
| Requires achieving ACR70 response for at least 6 subsequent months (ACR70 response means 70% improvement of tender and swollen joint count coupled with improvement in 3 of 5 of the following: patient's assessment, physician's assessment, ESR or CRP, pain scale, Health Assessment Questionnaire) |
The formula to calculate the DAS is: 0.54 × √ Ritchie articular index + 0.065 × 44 swollen joint count + 0.33 × ln ESR + 0.0072 × general health. The formula to calculate the DAS28 score is: 0.56 × √ 28 tender joint count + 0.28 × √ 28 swollen joint count + 0.7 × lnESR = 0.014 × general health.