| Literature DB >> 25078679 |
Shawn Rose, Jenny Dave, Corina Millo, Haley B Naik, Evan L Siegel, Nehal N Mehta.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis (PsA) increase cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk, but surrogate markers for CVD in these disorders are inadequate. Because the presence of sacroiliitis may portend more severe PsA, we hypothesized that sacroiliitis defined by computed tomography (CT) would be associated with increased vascular inflammation defined by 18-fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography/computed tomography (FDG-PET/CT), which is an established measure of CVD.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25078679 PMCID: PMC4261785 DOI: 10.1186/ar4676
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arthritis Res Ther ISSN: 1478-6354 Impact factor: 5.156
Figure 118-fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography/computed tomography delineates vascular inflammation. Images shown are representative computed tomography (CT) (left panels), 18-fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) (center panels) and fused FDG-PET/CT transaxial (right panels) scans from a patient with an unaffected aortic vasculature (upper panel) and one with an inflamed aortic vasculature (lower panel). Regions of interest outlining the ascending thoracic aorta are depicted in yellow in all images. A ring-shaped focus of increased metabolic activity in the aortic wall is also shown (blue arrows in FDG/PET and fused FDG-PET/CT images).
Patient characteristics
| Characteristics | All (
| Pso (
| PsA (
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 53 (41 to 61) | 54 (41 to 65) | 52 (41 to 59) | 0.526 |
|
| 35 (54) | 21 (55) | 14 (52) | 0.806 |
|
| 20 (9 to 32) | 20 (8 to 35) | 20 (10 to 31) | 0.931 |
|
| 9.2 (16) | 8.1 (13.7) | 10.8 (19.0) | 0.827 |
|
| 7.8 (9.3) | 7.3 (7.9) | 8.7 (11.2) | 0.967 |
|
| 27 (41) | – | – | – |
|
| – | – | 10 (4 to 15.5) | – |
|
| – | – | 8.9 (10.8) | – |
|
| – | – | 5.4 (9.0) |
|
|
| – | – | 4 (17) | – |
|
| – | – | 5 (21) | – |
|
| – | – | 1.0 (1.5) |
|
|
| – | – | 1.4 (3.8) |
|
|
| – | – | 12 (44) | – |
|
| 6 (9) | 2 (5) | 4 (15) | 0.224 |
|
| 25 (39) | 10 (26) | 15 (56) |
|
|
| 4 (6) | 2 (5) | 2 (7) | 1.000 |
|
| 15 (23) | 3 (8) | 12 (44) |
|
|
| 3 (5) | 1 (3) | 2 (7) | 0.565 |
|
| 24 (37) | 14 (37) | 10 (37) | 1.000 |
|
| 1 (2) | 0 (0) | 1 (4) | 0.415 |
|
| 7 (11) | 4 (11) | 3 (11) | 1.000 |
|
| 21 (32) | 13 (34) | 8 (30) | 0.791 |
|
| 44 (68) | 29 (76) | 15 (56) | 0.108 |
|
| 6 (9) | 3 (8) | 3 (11) | 1.000 |
|
| 18 (28) | 12 (32) | 6 (22) | 0.684 |
|
| 0 (0 to 4.5) | 0 (0 to 5) | 0 (0 to 0.8) | 0.590 |
|
| 4 (6) | 2 (5) | 2 (7) | 1.000 |
|
| 12 (19) | 7 (18) | 5 (19) | 1.000 |
|
| 24 (37) | 15 (39) | 9 (33) | 0.795 |
|
| 29 (25.9 to 32.3) | 29 (24.9 to 32.4) | 29 (26.7 to 32) | 0.572 |
|
| 125 (116 to 135) | 129 (120 to 135) | 122 (115 to 133) | 0.266 |
|
| 72 (65 to 78) | 71 (66 to 78) | 74 (63 to 79) | 0.719 |
|
| 94 (89 to 104) | 94 (89 to 104) | 94 (89 to 107) | 0.895 |
|
| 184 (158 to 203) | 185 (158 to 207) | 172 (157 to 201) | 0.910 |
|
| 108 (84 to 137) | 109 (84 to 149) | 101 (81 to 131) | 0.604 |
|
| 52 (42 to 63) | 52 (42 to 69) | 51 (47 to 59) | 0.947 |
|
| 96 (80 to 125) | 95 (80 to 125) | 98 (78 to 125) | 0.851 |
|
| 8 (5 to 13) | 8 (4 to 10) | 12 (5 to 18) | 0.097 |
|
| 1.7 (0.7 to 4.2) | 1.2 (0.7 to 3.1) | 3.0 (0.8 to 8) | 0.221 |
aASAS, Assessment of SpondyloArthritis international Society; DMARD, Disease-modifying antirheumatic drug; IQR, Interquartile range; NSAID, Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug; PASI, Psoriasis Area and Severity Index; PsA, Psoriatic arthritis; Pso, Psoriasis. Data are reported as median (IQR) unless indicated otherwise. DMARD therapy denotes methotrexate use, except for 1 patient who was taking both methotrexate and hydroxychloroquine. Biologic therapy indicates active TNF antagonist or anti-IL-12/23 receptor use except for one patient who was treated with abatacept for psoriatic arthritis. Reported P-values are for comparisons of Pso vs. PsA using Fisher’s exact tests for categorical variables, Mann-Whitney U tests for non-normally distributed continuous variables, and Student’s t-tests for normally distributed continuous variables. P < 0.05 was set as the significance level.
Vascular inflammation is increased in patients with sacroiliitis
| Pso (
| PsA (
| ||
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
| |
|
| 6.46 ± 1.43 | 6.72 ± 1.92 | 0.536 |
| Sacroiliitis absent ( | Sacroiliitis present ( | ||
|
|
|
| |
|
| 6.39 ± 1.49 | 7.33 ± 2.09 |
|
aCT, Computed tomography; PsA, Psoriatic arthritis; Pso, Psoriasis; SUVmax, Maximum standardized uptake value. Data are reported as mean ± SD of the greatest aortic SUVmax region (three consecutive slices) for each patient. Indicated P-values (P < 0.05 deemed significant) are for Student’s t-test comparisons of either Pso vs PsA or absence vs presence of sacroiliitis by CT scan.
Sacroiliitis and psoriatic arthritis are positively related to vascular inflammation even after adjustment for CVD risk factors
| Regression factors | Age, sex and BMI | Age, sex, BMI, HTN, DL, DM, Tob |
|---|---|---|
| Sacroiliitis | 0.268 ( | 0.270 ( |
| Psoriatic arthritis | 0.117 ( | 0.124 ( |
aMultivariate linear regression analyses were performed using aortic maximum standardized uptake (SUVmax) as the dependent variable. Independent variables included in the model were (1) age, sex, body mass index (BMI) and either sacroiliitis (row 1, left column) or psoriatic arthritis (row 2, left column) or (2) age, sex, BMI, hypertension (HTN), dyslipidemia (DL), diabetes mellitus (DM), tobacco use (Tob) and either sacroiliitis (row 1, right column) or psoriatic arthritis (row 2, right column). β-coefficients (P-values) are reported for the effects of sacroiliitis or psoriatic arthritis on vascular inflammation (aortic SUVmax) after adjustment for cardiovascular disease risk factors (age, sex, BMI, HTN, DL, DM and Tob). P-values <0.05 were considered significant.
Sacroiliitis predicts vascular inflammation beyond psoriatic arthritis and CVD risk factors
| Model | Aortic SUVmax
|
|---|---|
|
| 374.6 (<0.001) |
|
| 132.8 (<0.001) |
|
| 124.6 (<0.001) |
aLikelihood ratio testing was applied in nested Tobit models to assess the incremental value of sacroiliitis in predicting aortic vascular inflammation. The outcome variable was aortic maximum standardized uptake (SUVmax). Independent variables in the different models were as follows: psoriatic arthritis (unadjusted); age, sex, BMI and psoriatic arthritis (partially adjusted); and age, sex, BMI, hypertension, dyslipidemia, diabetes, tobacco use and psoriatic arthritis (fully adjusted). χ 2 values are reported for each model. P-values < 0.05 were considered significant.