Conference Coverage

Disease burden higher in osteoarthritis than rheumatoid arthritis


 

REPORTING FROM OARSI 2018


The MDHAQ/RAPID3 is a simple assessment tool that consists of two pages and asks patients to rate items such as their physical function in activities of daily living and levels of pain in the past week. It also asks about levels of anxiety, depression, and quality of sleep, and it includes a self-reported joint count and a patient global assessment. Scores on RAPID3 range from 0 to 30, and comprise three 0-10 scores for physical function, pain, and patient global assessment subscales in which higher scores indicate greater disease burden.

“Using this tool, we’ve been able to obtain data on patients with OA and RA for at least 30 years,” Dr. Pincus said.

One of the issues with comparing the burden of the two diseases, he noted, is that there are few places that have used the same assessment tool.

Dr. Pincus and his associates at Rush University have also shown that the disease burden in OA remains high 6 months after first visit, while greater improvement is seen in RA over this period (Osteoarthritis Cartilage. 2018;26[1]:S260. Abstract 491).

Pages

Recommended Reading

Certolizumab pegol: Has serious infection risk been overstated?
MDedge Internal Medicine
Few acutely ill hospitalized patients receive VTE prophylaxis
MDedge Internal Medicine
Reassurance for women taking certolizumab during pregnancy
MDedge Internal Medicine
AbbVie, Samsung Bioepis settle suits with delayed U.S. entry for adalimumab biosimilar
MDedge Internal Medicine
Dermatology practice gaps: improving medication management
MDedge Internal Medicine
MACE risk similar across arthritis subtypes
MDedge Internal Medicine
FDA advisory committee votes to recommend update to celecoxib safety labeling
MDedge Internal Medicine
Aim for remission, not low disease activity, in rheumatoid arthritis
MDedge Internal Medicine
Obesity and weight loss both linked to RA disability
MDedge Internal Medicine
Methotrexate-induced pulmonary fibrosis risk examined in 10-year study
MDedge Internal Medicine