| Literature DB >> 25047391 |
Philip Helliwell1, Laura Coates, Vinod Chandran, Dafna Gladman, Maarten de Wit, Oliver FitzGerald, Arthur Kavanaugh, Vibeke Strand, Philip J Mease, Wolf-Henning Boehncke, Richard G Langley, Ennio Lubrano, Mara Maccarone, Hendrik Schulze-Koops, Corinne Miceli-Richard, Ruben Queiro.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25047391 PMCID: PMC4282108 DOI: 10.1002/acr.22404
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arthritis Care Res (Hoboken) ISSN: 2151-464X Impact factor: 4.794
Unmet needs in PsA identification: addressing the problem*
| Unmet needs in PsA identification |
| PsA is often undiagnosed or misdiagnosed |
| Physicians and patients lack awareness of PsA |
| Appropriate screening tools for PsA are lacking |
| Criteria are unclear regarding rheumatologist referrals and/or treatment |
| Data are lacking regarding identifying at-risk and high-risk PsA patients and the value of intervention |
| Patients with PsA fall in a gap between psoriasis and arthritis patient groups |
| Addressing the problem |
| Develop simple, effective screening tools, diagnostic tests, and clinical findings |
| Define criteria for rheumatologist referral, including development and validation as well as implementation to ensure appropriate use |
| Educate health care providers (i.e., dermatologists and PCPs) on the impact of PsA (it is not a benign arthritis), and clinical targets that trigger rheumatologist referral |
| Establish multidisciplinary care (i.e., collaboration between dermatologists and rheumatologists) |
| Educate psoriasis patients to raise awareness of PsA; specialized nurse practitioners can educate patients and provide complementary support |
| Improve collaboration and awareness through patient organizations who willingly accept responsibility for PsA patients |
PsA = psoriatic arthritis; PCPs = primary care physicians.
Overview of PsA treatment algorithms: PsA severity*
| AAD ( | GRAPPA ( | EULAR ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mild | Step 1. NSAIDs | NSAIDs | NSAIDs |
| Step 2. conventional DMARD | |||
| Moderate | Step 1. conventional DMARD | Step 1. conventional DMARD | Step 1. NSAIDs |
| Step 2. combination DMARD/TNF inhibitor | Step 2. combination DMARD/TNF inhibitor | Step 2. methotrexate | |
| Step 3. switch to different DMARD | |||
| Severe or high risk | Combination synthetic DMARD/TNF inhibitor or other biologic agent | TNF inhibitor | Step 1. methotrexate |
| Step 2. different DMARD or TNF inhibitor (axial disease, high risk) | |||
| Step 3. begin (or switch) to different biologic agent, combination + DMARD |
PsA = psoriatic arthritis; AAD = American Academy of Dermatology; GRAPPA = Group for Research and Assessment of Psoriasis and Psoriatic Arthritis; EULAR = European League Against Rheumatism; NSAIDs = nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs; DMARD = disease-modifying antirheumatic drug; TNF = tumor necrosis factor.
High risk refers to patients with adverse prognostic factors, including ≥5 active joints, high functional impairment, radiographic damage, or past glucocorticoid use.
Overview of PsA treatment algorithms: PsA symptom type*
| AAD ( | GRAPPA ( | EULAR ( | ISR ( | BSR ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Peripheral | NSAIDs, corticosteroid injections, DMARDs, biologic agents | NSAIDs, corticosteroid injections, DMARDs, biologic agents | NSAIDs, corticosteroid injections, DMARDs, biologic agents | Step 1. NSAID Step 2. ≥1 DMARD, 2 months + 2 steroid injections Step 3. TNF inhibitor if ≥1 inflamed joint, pain VAS ≥40, favorable expert opinion, or radiographic evidence of progression | Step 1. NSAIDs ± local steroid injection Step 2. ≥2 DMARDs Step 3. TNF inhibitor if ≥3 swollen/tender joints or persistent or severe oligoarthritis Step 4. Second TNF inhibitor |
| Axial | – | NSAIDs, physiotherapy, biologic agents | NSAIDs, biologic agents | Step 1. NSAIDs (try ≥2 drugs, maximum doses, 3 months) Step 2. TNF inhibitor, if BASDAI ≥40, favorable expert opinion | Step 1. NSAIDs ± local steroid injection Step 2. TNF inhibitor if adverse prognostic factors |
| Enthesitis | – | NSAIDs, corticosteroid injections, physiotherapy, biologic agents | NSAIDs, corticosteroid injections, biologic agents | Step 1. NSAID, 3 months Step 2. ≥1 DMARD, + 2 local steroid injections Step 3. TNF inhibitor if favorable expert opinion, pain VAS ≥40 (0–100 mm scale), and HAQ DI ≥0.5 | – |
| Dactylitis | – | NSAIDs, corticosteroid injections, DMARDs, biologic agents | NSAIDs, corticosteroid injections, biologic agents | Step 1. NSAID, 3 months Step 2. ≥1 DMARD, + 2 local steroid injections Step 3. TNF inhibitor if favorable expert opinion, pain VAS ≥40 (0–100 mm scale), HAQ DI ≥0.5, uniformly swollen digit(s), and tenderness rating of ≥2 on 0–4 Likert scale | – |
PsA = psoriatic arthritis; AAD = American Academy of Dermatology; GRAPPA = Group for Research and Assessment of Psoriasis and Psoriatic Arthritis; EULAR = European League Against Rheumatism; ISR = Italian Society for Rheumatology; BSR = British Society for Rheumatology; NSAIDs = nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs; DMARDs = disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs; TNF = tumor necrosis factor; VAS = visual analog scale; BASDAI = Bath Ankylosing Spondylitis Disease Activity Index; HAQ = Health Assessment Questionnaire; DI = disability index.
Adverse prognostic factors include ≥5 swollen joints, elevated C-reactive protein, structural joint damage, or previous corticosteroid use.
Unmet needs in treating PsA patients: addressing the problem*
| Unmet needs in treating PsA patients |
| Available treatment algorithms have not been validated |
| No clear consensus exists on treatment success |
| Physicians and patients are unclear and sometimes do not agree on the components that constitute treatment success and/or how it should be measured |
| No available validated composite index combines and balances physician- and patient-oriented outcomes |
| Addressing the problem |
| Educate rheumatologists |
| Identify patients at high risk for disease progression |
| Provide timely and appropriate intervention |
| Communicate and/or educate dermatologists on appropriate referrals to rheumatologists |
| Validate current treatment algorithms (such as EULAR) |
| Develop and validate definitions for treatment response and remission |
| Develop and validate a composite assessment instrument that considers all manifestations of PsA |
| Improve communication between health care providers and patients to ensure that expectations are matched |
PsA = psoriatic arthritis; EULAR = European League Against Rheumatism.
Minimal disease activity criteria for PsA (36)*
| Outcome measure | Value |
|---|---|
| Swollen joint count | ≤1 |
| Tender joint count | ≤1 |
| PASI score or BSA | ≤1 or ≤3% |
| Tender entheseal points | ≤1 |
| Patient pain (VAS) score | ≤15 |
| Patient global disease activity (VAS) score | ≤20 |
| HAQ DI score | ≤0.5 |
Patients were classified as achieving minimal disease activity if they fulfilled 5 of 7 outcome measures. PsA = psoriatic arthritis; PASI = Psoriasis Area and Severity Index; BSA = body surface area; VAS = visual analog scale; HAQ = Health Assessment Questionnaire; DI = disability index.
Unmet needs in the awareness of PsA burden: addressing the problem*
| Unmet needs in the awareness of PsA burden |
| Awareness is low regarding the impact of PsA on patient lives |
| It is unclear how the patient perspective of severity correlates with classifications by health care providers |
| Awareness of the impact of comorbidities is low among health care providers and patients |
| The value and cost-effectiveness of therapies needs further defining, including evaluation of direct and indirect costs |
| Addressing the problem |
| Educate health care providers and patients about PsA impact on daily life, comorbidities, and long-term outcomes |
| Improve communication between health care providers and patients to ensure expectations are matched |
| Additional research is needed on the true value of therapies, including the impact on direct and indirect costs |
PsA = psoriatic arthritis.