Lisa J Herrinton1, Leslie Harrold2, Craig Salman3, Liyan Liu4, Robert Goldfien5, Maryam Asgari6, Joel M Gelfand7, Jashin J Wu8, Jeffrey R Curtis9. 1. Research Scientist for the Division of Research in Oakland, CA. lisa.herrinton@kp.org. 2. Associate Professor in the Department of Medicine at the University of Massachusetts Medical School in Worcester. leslie.harrold@umassmed.edu. 3. Data Analyst in Clinical Education for the American Academy of Ophthalmology in San Francisco, CA. andyc298@yahoo.com. 4. Senior Data Consultant for the Division of Research in Oakland, CA. liyan.liu@kp.org. 5. Rheumatologist at the Richmond Medical Center in CA. robert.goldfien@kp.org. 6. Dermatologist and Research Scientist at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. masgari@partners.org. 7. Dermatologist at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. joel.gelfand@uphs.upenn.edu. 8. Director of Dermatology Research for the Department of Dermatology at the Los Angeles Medical Center in CA. jashin.j.wu@kp.org. 9. Associate Professor of Medicine in the Division of Clinical Immunology and Rheumatology at the University of Alabama in Birmingham. jeffrey.curtis@ccc.uab.edu.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess variations in rheumatoid arthritis treatment and outcomes at the community level from 1998 through 2009. METHODS: The study used computerized data from 16 Kaiser Permanente Northern California Medical Centers. Mixed modeling was used to assess patterns across time and clinic. The analysis accounted for patient demographics, clustering of patients within Medical Centers, and repeated measures of patients over time. The metric used to measure drug use, months of use per patient per year, included both users and nonusers in the denominator, to account for both prevalence and duration of use. RESULTS: Assessment was performed of 28,601 patients with rheumatoid arthritis, with all levels of severity. From 1998 through 2009, methotrexate use doubled in the typical patient to include 23% of the time they were observed; sulfasalazine and hydrochloroquine use declined. By 2008 through 2009, leflunomide and antitumor necrosis factor agents were used by the typical patient 4% and 9% of the time, respectively. Between 1998 and 2009, disease-modifying antirheumatic drug use increased in the typical patient from 38% to 63% of the time, and oral prednisone use declined from 23% to 15% of the time, whereas opioid use initially rose but then fell to 23% of the time. No variations over time were observed for the rate of hospitalized pneumonia or opportunistic infection. Variation across clinics, measured by the difference in drug use between clinics at the 75th and 25th percentiles, was lowest for opioids (25% vs 20% of the time) and greatest for infliximab (< 1% to 3%). CONCLUSION: Increased use of disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs and declines in prednisone are encouraging. Opioid use may need intervention.
OBJECTIVE: To assess variations in rheumatoid arthritis treatment and outcomes at the community level from 1998 through 2009. METHODS: The study used computerized data from 16 Kaiser Permanente Northern California Medical Centers. Mixed modeling was used to assess patterns across time and clinic. The analysis accounted for patient demographics, clustering of patients within Medical Centers, and repeated measures of patients over time. The metric used to measure drug use, months of use per patient per year, included both users and nonusers in the denominator, to account for both prevalence and duration of use. RESULTS: Assessment was performed of 28,601 patients with rheumatoid arthritis, with all levels of severity. From 1998 through 2009, methotrexate use doubled in the typical patient to include 23% of the time they were observed; sulfasalazine and hydrochloroquine use declined. By 2008 through 2009, leflunomide and antitumor necrosis factor agents were used by the typical patient 4% and 9% of the time, respectively. Between 1998 and 2009, disease-modifying antirheumatic drug use increased in the typical patient from 38% to 63% of the time, and oral prednisone use declined from 23% to 15% of the time, whereas opioid use initially rose but then fell to 23% of the time. No variations over time were observed for the rate of hospitalized pneumonia or opportunistic infection. Variation across clinics, measured by the difference in drug use between clinics at the 75th and 25th percentiles, was lowest for opioids (25% vs 20% of the time) and greatest for infliximab (< 1% to 3%). CONCLUSION: Increased use of disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs and declines in prednisone are encouraging. Opioid use may need intervention.
Authors: Gabriela Schmajuk; Amal N Trivedi; Daniel H Solomon; Edward Yelin; Laura Trupin; Eliza F Chakravarty; Jinoos Yazdany Journal: JAMA Date: 2011-02-02 Impact factor: 56.272
Authors: Lisa J Herrinton; Liyan Liu; Bruce Fireman; James D Lewis; James E Allison; Nicole Flowers; Susan Hutfless; Fernando S Velayos; Oren Abramson; Andrea Altschuler; Geraldine S Perry Journal: Gastroenterology Date: 2009-05-13 Impact factor: 22.682
Authors: Carlos G Grijalva; Lang Chen; Elizabeth Delzell; John W Baddley; Timothy Beukelman; Kevin L Winthrop; Marie R Griffin; Lisa J Herrinton; Liyan Liu; Rita Ouellet-Hellstrom; Nivedita M Patkar; Daniel H Solomon; James D Lewis; Fenglong Xie; Kenneth G Saag; Jeffrey R Curtis Journal: JAMA Date: 2011-11-06 Impact factor: 56.272
Authors: Catherine H MacLean; Kenneth G Saag; Daniel H Solomon; Sally C Morton; Sarah Sampsel; John H Klippel Journal: Arthritis Rheum Date: 2004-04-15
Authors: Yvonne C Lee; Bing Lu; Hongshu Guan; Jeffrey D Greenberg; Joel Kremer; Daniel H Solomon Journal: Arthritis Rheumatol Date: 2020-07 Impact factor: 10.995
Authors: Iris Navarro-Millán; Mangala Rajan; Geyanne E Lui; Lisa M Kern; Laura C Pinheiro; Monika M Safford; Sebastian E Sattui; Jeffrey R Curtis Journal: Semin Arthritis Rheum Date: 2020-07-23 Impact factor: 5.532
Authors: Beth I Wallace; Paul Lin; Neil Kamdar; Mohamed Noureldin; Rodney Hayward; David A Fox; Jeffrey R Curtis; Kenneth G Saag; Akbar K Waljee Journal: Semin Arthritis Rheum Date: 2019-09-07 Impact factor: 5.532
Authors: Christina A Spivey; Kevin L Winthrop; Jenny Griffith; Cameron M Kaplan; Yanru Qiao; Arnold E Postlethwaite; Junling Wang Journal: Rheumatol Ther Date: 2019-11-18