ACR 2011 Medical Passport Highlights of ACR 2011 Chicago, IL November 2011 1 Faculty Hector Arbillaga, MD Peter Panopalis, MD Philip Baer, MD Janet Pope, MD Majed Khraishi, MD Anthony Russell, MD Clode Lessard, MD Yves Troyanov, MD Robert Offer, MD Edith Villeneuve, MD Medical Passport Program-ACR 2011 2 Disclosure Copyright 2011 STA HealthCare Communications Inc. All rights reserved. This program is published by STA HealthCare Communications Inc. as a professional service funded by Bristol-Myers Squibb Canada Co. The information and opinions contained herein reflect the views and experience of the authors and not necessarily those of Bristol-Myers Squibb Canada Co., or STA HealthCare Communications Inc. Any products mentioned herein should be used in accordance with the prescribing information contained in their respective product monograph. 3 Outline RA Treatment: Existing Disease-modifying Antirheumatic Drugs and Corticosteroids Hector Arbillaga, MD Rheumatoid Arthritis Clinical Aspects Peter Panopalis, MD Clinical Features of RA; Disease Severity; Outcomes Research and Metrology Robert Offer, MD Majed Khraishi, MD RA Treatment: Small Molecules, Biologics and Gene Therapy Clode Lessard, MD Edith Villeneuve, MD Looking Ahead to Kinase Inhibition in Rheumatoid Arthritis Anthony Russell, MD 4 Outline Imaging of Rheumatic Disease Edith Villeneuve, MD ACR Plenary Session: Discovery 2011 Robert Offer, MD ACR Late-breaking Abstracts Janet Pope, MD Spondylarthropathies: Recent Insights Majed Khraishi, MD Impact of Environmental Health on Autoimmunity Hector Arbillaga, MD Osteoporosis and Metabolic Bone Disease: Philip Baer, MD Clinical Aspects and Pathogenesis Orthopedics, Low Back Pain, and Rehabilitation Anthony Russell, MD 5 Outline Systemic Sclerosis (SSc), Fibrosing Syndromes and Raynaud's - Clinical Aspects and Therapeutics Clode Lessard, MD Complicated Raynaud's Phenomenon Philip Baer, MD Vasculitis Peter Panopalis, MD New Developments in the Clinical Evaluation, Immunology and Treatment of Myositis Yves Troyanov, MD Emerging Concepts in the Inflammatory Myopathies Yves Troyanov, MD Janet Pope, MD 6 RA Treatment: Existing Diseasemodifying Antirheumatic Drugs and Corticosteroids Highlights of the ACR Concurrent Abstract Session held Tuesday, November 8 Summarized by Dr. Hector Arbillaga 7 List of Presentations in this Section Speaker Title Villeneuve E Preliminary Results of a Multicentre Randomised Controlled Trial of Etanercept and Methotrexate to Induce Remission in Patients with Newly Diagnosed Inflammatory Arthritis Concurrent Abstract Session—RA Treatment: Existing Disease-modifying Antirheumatic Drugs and Corticosteroids. ACR 2011; Tues., Nov. 8. Abstract # 2465 8 MTX + Etanercept or Placebo in RA: Design of The EMPIRE Study Villeneuve E, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #2465. 9 MTX + Etanercept or Placebo in RA: Clinical Remission* in the EMPIRE Study MTX + placebo MTX + etanercept p = ns 35 % of patients 30 p = ns 29 31 24 25 20 15 p = 0.051 16 11 10 5 2 0 Week 2 Week 26 *No tender or swollen joints NB: 5(9.1%) stopped biologics due to sustained remission Villeneuve E, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #2465. Week 52 10 Does the Presence of ACPA Impact on Efficacy? DAS28 Remission at Week 52 (EMPIRE Study) Villeneuve E, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #2465. 11 MTX + Etanercept or Placebo in RA: Conclusions from the EMPIRE Study • Rapid clinical responses were demonstrated with MTX + ETN combination therapy • At one year, large proportions of both remission and LDAS were achieved in both groups • Trend toward earlier clinical responses were seen in the ACPA-positive patients • High response rates to MTX still need to be explained Villeneuve E, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #2465. 12 Rheumatoid Arthritis: Clinical Aspects Highlights of ACR Poster and Concurrent Abstract Sessions, Sunday November 6 Summarized by Drs. Robert Offer and Peter Panopalis 13 List of Presentations in this Section Speaker / Primary Author Title Bili A Prolonged Hydroxychloroquine Use Is Associated with Decreased Incidence of Cardiovascular Disease in Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients 1168 Walker CP Statin Use Is Associated with Decreased Incident Coronary Artery Events in Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients 1160 Wolfe F Reduction in the Risk of Myocardial Infarction in Bisphosphonate and Calcium/Vitamin D Treated Rheumatoid Arthritis and Lupus Patients: A Longitudinal Cohort Study 2589 Karpouzas GA Differential Predictors of Mixed and Fully Calcified Coronary Plaques in Coronary Artery DiseaseNaïve Patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis 759 Poster and Concurrent Abstract Sessions: Rheumatoid Arthritis: Clinical Aspects. ACR 2011; Sun., Nov. 6 Abstract # 14 List of Presentations in this Section (cont'd) Speaker / Primary Author Title van Sijl AM Outward Carotid Arterial Wall Remodelling in Rheumatoid Arthritis: A Case-Control Study 760 Berglin EH Comparison of the 1987 ACR and 2010 ACR/EULAR Classification Criteria for Rheumatoid Arthritis in Clinical Practice 312 de Hair MJ The 2010 ACR/EULAR Classification Criteria for Rheumatoid Arthritis: Earlier Diagnosis At the Expense of Increased Heterogeneity 313 Kennish LM 2010 American College of Rheumatology/European League Against Rheumatism Rheumatoid Arthritis Criteria Classifies 67% of Systemic Lupus Erythematosus and 38% of Psoriatic Arthritis As Rheumatoid Arthritis: Implications for Real World Use 314 Poster and Concurrent Abstract Sessions: Rheumatoid Arthritis: Clinical Aspects. ACR 2011; Sun., Nov. 6 Abstract # 15 List of Presentations in this Section (cont'd) Speaker / Primary Author Title Nicolau J Performances of the 2010 ACR/EULAR Classification Criteria of Rheumatoid Arthritis: Comparison with 1987 ACR Criteria in the Community-Based Vera Cohort 315 Ortiz Garcia AM Comparison of the 1987 and 2010 Classification Criteria for Rheumatoid Arthritis in a Population of Patients with Early Arthritis 319 Bergman MJ Routine Assessment of Patient Index Data-3 (RAPID3), a Patient-Reported Index to Guide a Treat-to-Target Strategy for Rheumatoid Arthritis in Usual Care 331 Yokogawa N To Screen Remission without Formal Joint Count: Analysis of Routine Assessment of Patient Index Data 3 in Japanese National Database 345 Poster and Concurrent Abstract Sessions: Rheumatoid Arthritis: Clinical Aspects. ACR 2011; Sun., Nov. 6 Abstract # 16 Prolonged Hydroxychloroquine Use in RA is Associated with Decrease in CVD 72% reduction p<0.001 vs. never use Bili A, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1168. Prolonged Hydroxychloroquine Use in RA is Associated with Decrease in CAD 73% reduction p<0.001 vs. never use Bili A, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1168. Statin Use is Associated with Decreased CAD Events in Patients with RA and no CVD • Objective: To examine the association of statin use with incident CAD in an inception cohort of RA patients • Method: Inception cohort of RA patients 1881 patients with newly diagnosed RA, but no pre-existing CVD Primary outcome: Time to CAD Secondary outcome: Time to CVD • Key results: 550 patients were included In RA patients without CVD, statin use was associated with a 4% per month decrease in incident CAD For patients using statins for >17 months, the risk of incident CAD decreased by 70% Walker CP, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1160. Bisphosphonates and CAD Treatment Odds ratio for MI (95% CI) Bisphosphonate alone 0.75 (0.58-0.98) Calcium + vitamin D 0.57 (0.42-0.77) Bisphosphonate + calcium + vitamin D 0.38 (0.22-0.66) • Recent studies have reported increased survival on bisphosphonates and increased CAD in patients using ”excessive” calcium supplements • This study adds support to a protective effect of bisphosphonates by reducing MIs Wolfe F, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #2589. Calcified Coronary Artery Plaques in RA: Distribution of Plaque Types Compared with Controls 80 % of affected segments 70 p = 0.0002 Controls RA 70 60 51 50 p = 0.004 40 28 30 21 20 14 16 10 0 Non-calcified Mixed Karpouzas GA, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #759. Full calcified Calcified Coronary Artery Plaques in RA: Key Findings • Predictors of higher mixed plaque prevalence: DAS28-3 ≥ 3.2 High CRP • Treatment with a TNF-α inhibitor was associated with a 70% lower risk for mixed plaque presence Even in the absence of good clinical response Karpouzas GA, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #759. Outward Carotid Arterial Wall Remodelling in RA: A Case-Control Study • Objective: To assess arterial remodelling in RA • Method: B-mode carotid ultrasonography was performed in 96 RA and 274 healthy controls Investigators assessed various parameters such as intima-media thickness (IMT), interadventitial diameter (IAD) and lumen diameter (LD) • Results: RA is associated with outward remodelling • Interpretation: This is relevant in view of the association between outward remodelling and plaque instability and rupture van Sijl AM, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #760. Comparisons of the 1987 ACR and 2010 ACR/EULAR Classification Criteria in Early Arthritis • The 2010 ACR/EULAR criteria had higher sensitivity but lower specificity than 1987 ACR criteria in a cohort of early arthritis patients1,3 • Use of the 2010 ACR/EULAR criteria clearly allows earlier diagnosis of RA, although some patients with self-limiting disease may be falsely diagnosed with RA2 • Patients fulfilling 2010 ACR/EULAR criteria during early disease are less likely to be autoantibody positive and more likely to have mono-arthritis than those fulfilling 1987 ACR criteria2 1. Berglin EH, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #312. 2. de Hair MJ, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #313. 3. Kennish LM, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #314. Comparisons of the 1987 ACR and 2010 ACR/EULAR Classification Criteria in Early Arthritis • 2010 criteria have low specificity and will incorrectly label those as having RA when in fact they have another form of inflammatory arthritis1 Physicians need to be aware of this when applying the new criteria • Using a very early community-based cohort, the 2010 ACR/EULAR criteria classified slightly more patients than the 1987 ACR criteria but otherwise they performed similarly2 • In another EA population, there were no relevant differences in RA disease identification when the 1987 or the 2010 classification criteria are implemented, except for a higher specificity for the 1987 set3 1. Kennish LM, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #314. 2. Nicolau J, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #315. 3. Ortiz Garcia AM, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #319. 25 The Use of RAPID3 for a Treat-to-Target Strategy • Background: RAPID3 is a composite measure of disease activity, requiring only 3 patient selfreported measures: Physical function, pain and patient estimate of global disease status • Method: The authors compared RAPID3 to DAS28 and to CDAI in a treat-to-target approach in a usual care setting • Findings: RAPID3 appears similar to DAS28 and CDAI for recognition of low activity/severity or remission versus high activity/severity to guide a treat-to-target strategy for RA Bergman MJ, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #331. Use of the RAPID3 to Assess Remission Sensitivity (%) Specificity (%) SDAI remission 91 93 CDAI remission 89.3 93.8 DAS28 remission 76.9 84.7 RAPID3 < 2 90.5 79.4 RAPID3 < 3 95.4 31.6 N• =4479 • Yokogawa N, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #345. Clinical Features of Rheumatoid Arthritis; Disease Severity; Outcomes Research and Metrology Highlights of an ACR Poster Session, Tuesday, November 8 Summarized by Dr. Robert Offer 28 List of Presentations in this Section Speaker Title Knevel R Genetic Predisposition of the Severity of Joint Destruction in Rheumatoid Arthritis; A Population Based Study. 2136 Clowse ME Contraception Use in Women with Rheumatoid Arthritis 2109 Poster Session: Clinical Features of Rheumatoid Arthritis; Disease Severity; Outcomes Research and Metrology. ACR 2011; Tues., Nov. 8. Abstract # 29 Susceptibility to RA is Partly Inherited. What About Severity of RA? • Objective: To evaluate whether the severity of joint destruction in RA is heritable • Method: Data analysis of records from 325 patients in an Icelandic database with complete radiographs of hand and feet and relevant genealogic information • Results: Significant associations between degree of relatedness and similarity in joint destruction rates were observed Knevel R, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #2136. Are Women on RA Medications Using Contraception Appropriately? Contraceptive method Failure rate* Ineffective No method Use in this cohort† 36 (34%) 85% Abstinence 16 11 Withdrawal 27% 4 Rhythm method 25% 3 Condoms 15% 9 Effective 24 (22.6%) Estrogen-combination pills 8% 17 Progestin-only pills 5% 2 Depo-Provera® injection 3% 1 0.2% 4 Intra-uterine device Sterilization *% of women who conceive using this method over a year †Some women use multiple forms of contraception Clowse ME, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #2109. 46 (43.4%) FDA Pregnancy Categories: RA Medications FDA Definition Category DMARDs and Biologics A Extensive human safety data demonstrating no fetal risk B Reassuring animal data with little/no human data to confirm this; OR animal studies show risk but human data showing no risk TNF inhibitors Sulfasalazine (D at term) C Either no animal studies or animal studies suggest no risk, no human data to confirm this Hydroxychloroquine Abatacept Rituximab D Some evidence of adverse reactions in fetus, but potential benefit may outweigh the risks X Documented fetal harm and the benefit of drug does not outweigh the risk Clowse ME, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #2109. Methotrexate Leflunomide Contraceptive Use by RA Medication Class B Class C Class X Contraception Women taking medication Ineffective Effective Sterilization TNFi 56 (53%) 23 (41%) 14 (25%) 19 (34%) SSZ 6 (6%) 1 (17%) 2 (33%) 3 (50%) HCQ 20 (19%) 6 (30%) 7 (35%) 7 (35%) ABA or RTX 13 (12%) 3 (23%) 0 10 (77%) MTX or LEF 59 (56%) 17 (28%) 14 (23%) 28 (48%) Clowse ME, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #2109. Are women on RA medications using contraception appropriately? Conclusions • Almost half of women with RA in this cohort took FDA class X medications 28% of these women were using ineffective contraception, leaving them at high risk for pregnancy • 5-fold more women using ineffective contraception had a prior elective termination than either women using effective contraception or sterilization • This study highlights the importance of contraceptive education and prescription by rheumatologists to ensure that patients taking potentially teratogenic medications do not become pregnant Clowse ME, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #2109. RA Treatment: Small Molecules, Biologics and Gene Therapy Highlights of ACR Poster Sessions, November 6-8 Summarized by Drs. Majed Khraishi, Clode Lessard, Robert Offer, Janet Pope and Edith Villeneuve 35 List of Presentations in this Section Speaker / primary author Title Pope J The Effectiveness of Abatacept in a Large Rheumatoid Arthritis Real World Practice: Changes in the HAQ Over Time and Durability of Response 1222 Yazici Y Comparative Effectiveness and Time to Response Among Abatacept, Adalimumab, Etanercept and Infliximab for the Treatment of Rheumatoid Arthritis in a Real World Routine Care Registry 2233 Fleischmann R Treatment Outcomes Based on Methotrexate Dose Range in Patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis Receiving Etanercept Plus Methotrexate Versus Methotrexate Alone 441 Poster Sessions—RA Treatment: Small Molecules, Biologics and Gene Therapy. ACR 2011; Nov. 6-8. Abstract # 36 List of Presentations in this Section (cont'd) Speaker / primary author Title Emery P Evaluation of the Association Between Disease Activity and Risk of Serious Infections in Subjects with Rheumatoid Arthritis When Treated with Etanercept or DMARDs 429 Yonemoto Y Direct Comparison of Four Biologics in Biologicnaïve Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients 1236 Strangfeld A Impact of Different Biologic Agents on the Improvement of Fatigue 461 Meissner B Real-World Switching Patterns in RA Patients Receiving Abatacept, Adalimumab, Etanercept or Infliximab As Second-Line Biologic Therapy 2198 Poster Sessions—RA Treatment: Small Molecules, Biologics and Gene Therapy. ACR 2011; Nov. 6-8. Abstract # 37 List of Presentations in this Section (cont'd) Speaker Title Burmester JR Tofacitinib (CP-690,550), An Oral Janus Kinase Inhibitor, in Combination with Methotrexate, in Patients with Active Rheumatoid Arthritis with An Inadequate Response to Tumor Necrosis FactorInhibitors: A 6-Month Phase 3 Study 718 Yamanaka H Tofacitinib (CP-690,550), An Oral Janus Kinase Inhibitor, As Monotherapy or with Background Methotrexate in Japanese Patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis: A Phase 2/3 Long-Term Extension Study 1215 Vanhoutte F GLPG0634 Shows Selective Inhibition of JAK1 and Maintained JAK-STAT Suppression in Healthy Volunteers 2210 Poster Sessions—RA Treatment: Small Molecules, Biologics and Gene Therapy. ACR 2011; Nov. 6-8. Abstract # 38 List of Presentations in this Section (cont'd) Speaker Title Urata Y Treating to Target Matrix Metalloproteinase 3 Normalisation Together with Disease Activity Score Below 2.6 Yields Better Effects Than Each Alone In Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients: Treating to Twin Targets; T-4 Study 1207 Matsubara T SNP Algorithms for Prediction of Efficacy and Adverse Events of Abatacept 1263 Poster Sessions—RA Treatment: Small Molecules, Biologics and Gene Therapy. ACR 2011; Nov. 6-8. Abstract # 39 The Effectiveness of Abatacept in a Large RA Real-World Practice • Background: Long-term, real-world effectiveness data in RA patients using abatacept in a large multicentre cohort are lacking There is a high drop out rate with some biologics, such as TNF inhibitors, within the first two years of treatment NNT for improving HAQ in RA for TNFi is 1.94 Pope J, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1222. The Effectiveness of Abatacept in a Large RA Real-World Practice • Objective: To determine the real-world effectiveness of abatacept in RA patients • Assessments: Changes in health assessment questionnaire (HAQ) Proportion of patients continuing abatacept over time NNT to improve HAQ by at least the minimally clinical important difference (MCID) of 0.22. Comparison of TNFi-exposed vs. nonexposed patients Pope J, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1222. Abatacept in Real-World Practice: Baseline Characteristics and Disposition Post DMARD N=369 Post TNFi N=1,402 Total Cohort N=1,771 p Value Mean age, years (SD) 58.80 (13.65) 57.28 (13.10) 57.60 (13.23) 0.0496 Mean time since diagnosis, years (SD) 13.25 (10.83) 17.36 (10.92) 16.53 (11.02) <0.001 Female gender, n (%) 260 (70.46) 1,107 (78.96) 1,367 (77.19) <0.001 Mild 1 (0.27) 4 (0.29) 5 (0.28) Moderate 22 (5.96) 104 (7.42) 126 (7.11) Parameter Disease Severity, n (%) 0.736 Severe 346 (93.77) 1,291 (92.08) 1,637 (92.43) NA 0 (0.00) 3 (0.21) 3 (0.17) 26.12 (0.86) 25.75 (0.58) 26.79 (0.53) Mean durability of treatment, months (SD) Pope J, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1222. < 0.001 Abatacept in Real-World Practice: Change in HAQ Scores 2 1.8 Mean HAQ Score 1.6 1.4 1.2 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 Post DMARD Post TNFi Total cohort 0 Baseline 12 months Pope J, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1222. 24 months 36 months Abatacept in Real-World Practice: Overall Treatment Durability Pope J, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1222. Abatacept in Real-World Practice: Treatment Durability by Prior Treatment Pope J, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1222. Abatacept in Real-World Practice: Achievement of Clinically Important HAQ Change MCID Yes, n (%) No, n (%) # of prior biologics 0 ≥1 213 (70.1) 806 (71.4) 91 (29.9) 323 (28.6) OR 95% CI p value NNT (1/ARR) Modified NNT 0 biologics Modified NNT ≥ 1 biologic 0.94 0.71 to 1.24 0.65 75.5 1.43 1.40 Pope J, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1222. Abatacept in Real-World Practice: Conclusions • Abatacept is effective in improving function in RA, as measured by HAQ, despite long disease duration and in 1st biologic and post exposure to other biologics • HAQ continued to improve over the first 2 years in both 1st and post-other biologics • The real world durability of abatacept is better as first biologic • The overall drug survival in this large study seems similar to other biologics despite 79% having previous TNFi exposure • NNT to improve HAQ by at least MCID was 1.4 to 1.43 and not different between those pre- or post- other biologics and is a very good NNT Pope J, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1222. Comparative effectiveness and time to response among adalimumab, abatacept, etanercept and infliximab for the treatment of RA in a real world routine care registry Yusuf Yazici, MD, Maria F Filopoulos, MD, Christopher J Swearingen, PhD NYU Hospital for Joint Diseases, New York, USA, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, AR Yazici et al. ACR 2011 48 Method Prospective analysis from NYU Arthritis Registry Monitoring Database (ARMD) since 2005 in all patients seen in routine care. Each patient in this setting completes 1-page MDHAQ at every visit Usage of the biologic medications abatacept, adalimumab, etanercept and infliximab along with self-reported disease activity and clinic measures were abstracted. Treatments were considered to be independent of each other as no individual received biologic medications in combination. Adapted from Yazici et al. ACR 2011 49 Method Time to first response defined as Improvement in RAPID3 of at least 3.6 (clinically important difference). Change from biologic medication initiation to first response for selfreported disease activity and clinic measures was estimated. For those individuals with no response, time to last follow-up was calculated. Differences in time to first response between biologic medications were estimated using Cox proportional hazards model. Adapted from Yazici et al. ACR 2011 50 RAPID3 component scores at baseline Adapted from Yazici et al. ACR 2011 51 Cumulative incidence of time to RAPID3 >3.6 response adjusted for age and disease duration Adapted from Yazici et al. ACR 2011 52 Conclusion Overall efficacy of abatacept, adalimumab, etanercept and infliximab was similar. In addition, no differences in time to response was shown among these biologic agents when treating RA patients. With no difference in clinical outcomes or response time, most treatment decisions may be based on ease of use, safety data and long term survival of respective biologics agents when they are being considered for RA treatment. 53 What is the Optimal Dose of MTX When Used in Combination with Etanercept? MTX Dose Range (mg) Low (≤12.5) Medium (12.6 – 17.5) High (≥ 17.6) n 49 60 111 Median MTX dose 7.5 15 20 DAS28 < 2.6, % 46.9 58.3 55.0 DAS44 < 1.6, % 49.0 55.0 55.0 ACR70, % 41.7 57.6 52.3 HAQ ≤ 0.5, % 66.7 59.3 54.9 Good EULAR response, % 73.5 83.3 72.1 TSS Δ ≤ 0.5, % 80.9 90.0 73.9 Fleischmann R. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #441. Does RA Disease Activity Influence Risk of Serious Infection (BSRBR)? • No increase of infection rates with DMARDs and Etanercept when adjusted for other factors • Significant increase of infection rate with higher DAS at baseline HR for serious infection 95% CI Etanercept vs. DMARD 1.066 0.86 to 1.32 DAS (per integer increase) 1.156 1.06 to 1.26 Emery P, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #429. Direct Comparison of 4 Biologics in Biologic-Naïve RA Patients • 144 biologic-naïve patients starting a biologic from July 2008 onward Baseline Characteristic IFX (n=37) ETN (n=39) TCZ (n=27) ADA (n=39) p Male, % 16 21 22 28 0.65 Age, years 59 59 63 60 0.33 RA duration, months 105 131 149 132 0.28 Concomitant MTX, % 100 54 41 87 <0.01 6.6 6.3 5.3 6.2 <0.01 84 67 74 59 0.11 4.5 4.8 4.8 5.0 0.77 CRP (mg/dL) 2.66 2.81 4.27 2.62 <0.01 ESR (mm/hr) 53 54 71 52 0.41 MMP-3 (ng/dL) 275.2 241.0 315.4 286.0 0.74 DAS-28 (ESR) 4.9 4.8 5.5 4.8 0.73 DAS-28 (CRP) 3.9 3.8 4.6 3.9 <0.05 MTX dosage, mg/wk Concomitant PSL, % PSL dosage, mg/day Yonemoto Y, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1236. Direct Comparison of 4 Biologics in Biologic-Naïve RA Patients: Results • At 6 months: All agents improved DAS28-ESR significantly Significantly greater change in DAS28 for TCZ vs. INF and ADA No ∆ in drug survival rate – TCZ 100% – ETN 92 % – ADA and INF 89% Yonemoto Y, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1236. Direct Comparison of 4 Biologics in Biologic-Naïve RA Patients: Interpretation • All therapies achieve similar results1 • Slightly better response of TCZ group possibly due to suppression of APR1 Will this be generalizable and sustained? • Safety and tolerability differences may emerge over the long term At ACR 2011, several long-term studies presented – 9 years of etanercept monotherapy2 – 8 years of adalimumab ± MTX3 – 2 years of abatacept in a real-world setting4 1. Yonemoto Y, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1236. 2. Fleischmann RM, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1217. 3. Breedveld FC, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1231. 4. Pope J, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1222.\ Fatigue: Are All Biologics Equal? Treatment No. of patients No fatigue at 6 months Significant improvement Adj. OR 95% CI Adj. OR 95% CI DMARD 1,059 Ref. - Ref. - Etanercept 1,272 1.7* 1.3 to 2.1 2.0* 1.7 to 2.5 507 1.6* 1.2 to 2.2 1.7* 1.3 to 2.2 1,407 1.4* 1.1 to 1.7 1.8* 1.4 to 2.2 Rituximab 783 1.3 0.9 to 1.8 1.6* 1.2 to 2.1 Abatacept 180 1.1 0.7 to 1.9 1.4 0.9 to 2.1 Tocilizumab 222 1.6* 1.0 to 2.4 2.0* 1.4 to 2.9 Infliximab Adalimumab *Statistically significant difference vs. DMARD group Strangfeld A, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #461. Fatigue: Are All Biologics Equal? 7 Mean level of fatigue DMARD Etanercept 6 Infliximab Adalimumab Rituximab 5 Abatacept Tocilizumab 4 Baseline 3 months Strangfeld A, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #461. 6 months Real-life Biologic Switching Patterns • Among patients on a 2nd biologic for RA: 78.5% had switched from one anti-TNF agent to another 2.6% had switched from abatacept to anti-TNF 20.0% had switched from anti-TNF to abatacept • 21.9% of the above patient switched to a 3rd biologic within 1 year 23.3% of 2nd-line anti-TNF patients switched to a 3rd agent 15.9% of 2nd-line abatacept patients switched to a 3rd agent Analysis of pharmacy data in the US Meissner B, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #2198. 61 Tofacitinib in TNF Failures: The ORAL Step Study • At Month 3, all placebo patients blindly advanced to tofacitinib 5 or 10 mg BID • Primary assessments: ACR20, HAQ-DI, DAS28(ESR) <2.6, safety and tolerability Burmester JR, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #718. Tofacitinib in TNF Failures (ORAL Step Study) : Prior DMARD Use n (%) PBO 5 n=66 PBO 10 n=66 5 mg n=133 10 mg BID n=134 66 (100) 66 (100) 132 (99.2)* 132 (98.5)† 36 (54.5) 7 (10.6) 29 (43.9) 2 (3.0) 27 (40.9) 42 (63,6) 4 (6.0) 28 (42.4) 5 (7.6) 16 (24.2) 65 (48.9) 9 (6.8) 65 (48.9) 5 (3.8) 56 (42.1) 74 (55.2) 9 (6.7) 57 (42.5) 8 (6.0) 42 (31.3) Other biologics 4 (6.1) 10 (15.2) 21 (15.8) 11 (8.2) Non-biologic DMARDs other than MTX 16 (24.2) 17 (25.8) 53 (39.8) 37 (27.6) Prior TNFi Adalimumab Certolizumab Etanercept Golimumab Infliximab *One patient had been previously treated with a biosimilar version of etanercept; † Two patients had no previous treatment with TNFi (MTX, n=1; MTX + sulfasalazine, n=1) Burmester JR, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #718. Tofacitinib in TNF Failures: ACR20 Responses at Month 3 60 48.1† 50 % of patients 41.7* 40 30 24.4 20 10 0 Placebo Tofacitinib 5 mg *p≤0.05; †p<0.0001 Burmester JR, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #718. Tofacitinib 10 mg Tofacitinib in TNF Failures: ACR20 Responses at Month 3 by Previous TNFi Exposure Placebo Tofacitinib 5 mg 60 Tofacitinib 10 mg 53.3† 48.3 50 % of patients 43.4* 41.7 37.8* 40 36.4 30.6 30 22.2 20 10.8 10 0 1 Prior TNFi 2 Prior TNFis *p≤0.05; †p<0.0001 Burmester JR, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #718. 3 Prior TNFis Tofacitinib in TNF Failures: Laboratory Tests Month 3 PBO Month 6 5 mg BID 10 mg BID PBO 5 PBO 10 5 mg BID 10 mg BID LS mean change from baseline Neutrophil count, 103/mm3 0.13 -0.93‡ -0.81‡ -0.77* -0.69* -0.73† -0.77‡ Hemoglobin, g/dL -0.10 0.11 0.01 0.11 0.03 0.16 -0.02 Δ LDL-C from baseline, % -0.3 11.1† 11.7‡ 9.6† 16.2‡ 11.8‡ 10.4‡ Δ HDL-C from baseline, % 0.03 13.4‡ 15.3‡ 14.2‡ 17.3‡ 16.4‡ 18.0‡ Serum creatinine (mg/dL) 0.05 0.04 0.05 0.04 0.06 0.05 0.06* Confirmed incidence, n (%) Neutropenia (500-1499 cells/mm3) 0 1 (<1) 0 0 0 0 1 (<1) Decreased hemoglobin (-1 to -3 g/dL) 12 (10.2) 9 (7.8) 16 (12.9) 4 (8.0) 5 (10.4) 5 (5.0) 15 (14.7) *p≤0.05; †p<0.0\01; ‡p<0.0001 Burmester JR, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #718. Tofacitinib in TNF Failures (ORAL Step Study: Conclusions • Tofacitinib 5 and 10 mg BID demonstrated statistically significant and clinically meaningful: Reductions in the signs and symptoms of RA Improvements in physical function Achievement of DAS-defined remission • Evidence for rapid onset of efficacy was also demonstrated with an increase in efficacy response through 6 months of treatment • Changes in mean neutrophil counts, hemoglobin, cholesterol (HDL and LDL) were observed over the first 3-month treatment period; mean changes stabilized thereafter. ALT >3x ULN was uncommonly reported; AST >3x ULN not reported • One death was reported; no opportunistic infections or cases of TB were observed • No new safety signals were detected Burmester JR, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #718. Long-term Tofacitinib Use in Japanese Patients with RA: ACR20 Results Yamanaka H, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1215. 68 Early Research with GLPG0634, A Novel, Selective JAK1 Inhibitor • Key findings: GLPG0634 potently inhibits JAK1 with a 30-fold selectivity over JAK2 in whole blood assays In healthy volunteers, GLPG0634 is well tolerated in the pharmacologic active dose range PK/PD relationship is consistent with once-daily dosing No signs indicative of anemia were observed after 10-days of dosing • Results support progression into efficacy evaluation in RA patients Vanhoutte F, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #2210. 69 Research Presented at ACR 2011 With Possible Implications for Future Practice • Treating to target MMP-3 together with DAS28 < 2.6 yields better results than each target alone in RA (Treating to Twin Targets [T-4] Study)1 • SNP algorithms predict efficacy and adverse events of abatacept2 Remission: sensitivity-specificity 91-97% AEs: sensitivity-specificity 95-100% 1. Urata Y, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1207. 2. Matsubara T, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1263. Looking Ahead to Kinase Inhibition in Rheumatoid Arthritis Highlights of an ACR Clinical Symposium, Sunday, November 6 Summarized by Drs. Robert Offer and Anthony Russell 71 List of Presentations in this Section Speaker Title Genovese MC Which Kinase Pathways are Important in Rheumatoid Arthritis and How Do We Decide What to Target? Weinblatt ME What Does the Data Inform Us About Safety and Efficacy of Kinase Inhibitors? Fleischmann RM Where Will These Agents Fit into Our Treatment Paradigm? Clinical Symposium: Looking Ahead to Kinase Inhibition in Rheumatoid Arthritis ACR 2011; Sun., Nov. 6 25. 72 Simple Description of JAK Pathway Tyrosine kinases phosphorylate Receptors are activated by binding with the ligand JAKs bind and activate STATs STATs migrate into the nucleus and cause deregulation or gene transcription Genovese MC. Clinical Symposium " Looking Ahead to Kinase Inhibition in Rheumatoid Arthritis". Presented at ACR 2011. 73 JAK Signalling JAK1 JAK2 JAK3 TYK2 Type I and Type II cytokine receptors Type II cytokine receptors Common γ chain elicits signals from IL-2 receptor family, IL-4 receptor family Type 1 interferons α/β Common γ chain elicits signals from IL-2 receptor family, IL-4 receptor family Receptors for hormones Erythropoietin Thrombopoietin Prolactin Growth hormone IL-2,4,7,9,15,21 IL-12 receptor B1 subunit (IL-12/23) IL-2, 4, 7, 9,15, 21 GM-CSF receptor family (IL-3 R, IL-5R GM-CSFR) gp130 receptor family IL-6, 11, 27, 31 gp130 receptor family IL-6, 11, 27, 31 Type 1 interferons α/β Type 1 interferons α/β Type II interferons γ Type II interferons γ Genovese MC. Clinical Symposium " Looking Ahead to Kinase Inhibition in Rheumatoid Arthritis". Presented at ACR 2011. 74 Other Enzymes: SYK and BTK Enzyme Pathway Spleen tyrosine kinase (SYK) FcγR and B-cell receptor signalling Bruton’s Tyrosine Kinase (BTK) Activated by SYK Genovese MC. Clinical Symposium " Looking Ahead to Kinase Inhibition in Rheumatoid Arthritis". Presented at ACR 2011. 75 Tofacitinib (JAK Inhibitor): 6-week Phase II Study in RA in Monotherapy Kremer JM, et al. Arthritis Rheum 2009; 60(7):1895-905. Cited by Weinblatt ME. Clinical Symposium " Looking Ahead to Kinase Inhibition in Rheumatoid Arthritis". Presented at ACR 2011. 76 Tofacitinib (JAK Inhibitor): Phase II Study in RA in Combination with MTX – Week 12 Results % of patients with ACR responses ACR20 ACR50 ACR70 70 60.6 60 58.7 60.0 50 40 37.7 30 20 10 0 Placebo + MTX 5 mg + MTX 15 mg + MTX Kremer JM, et al. Presented at ACR 2008; abstract L13. Cited by Weinblatt ME. Clinical Symposium " Looking Ahead to Kinase Inhibition in Rheumatoid Arthritis". Presented at ACR 2011. 20 mg + MTX 77 Tofacitinib (JAK Inhibitor): Phase II Study in RA in Monotherapy – Week 12 Results % of patients with ACR responses ACR20 80 ACR50 75.4 70 ACR70 75.4 63.3 60 47.2 50 40 30 28.8 20 10 0 Placebo Tofacitinib 5 Tofacitinib 10 Tofacitinib 15 Adalimumab mg mg mg 40 mg eow Kanik K, et al. Ann Rheum Dis 2009; 68(Suppl3):123. Cited by Weinblatt ME. Clinical Symposium " Looking Ahead to Kinase Inhibition in Rheumatoid Arthritis". Presented at ACR 2011. 78 Tofacitinib (JAK Inhibitor): Phase III Study in RA in Monotherapy – Week 12 Results ACR20 Δ HAQ DAS Remission Placebo 27% -0.2 4% 5 mg bid 60%* -0.5* 6% 10 mg bid 66%* -0.6* 9.6% *p < 0.0001 Fleischmann RM, et al. Presented at ACR 2010; abstract L8. Cited by Weinblatt ME. Clinical Symposium " Looking Ahead to Kinase Inhibition in Rheumatoid Arthritis". Presented at ACR 2011. 79 Tofacitinib (JAK Inhibitor): Phase III Study in RA in Combination with DMARDs – Week 24 Results ACR20 Δ HAQ DAS Remission Placebo 31% -0.21 3% 5 mg bid 53%* -0.46* 11% 10 mg bid 58%* -0.56* 15%* *p < 0.0001 Kremer J, et al. Ann Rheum Dis 2011; 70(Suppl3):170. Cited by Weinblatt ME. Clinical Symposium " Looking Ahead to Kinase Inhibition in Rheumatoid Arthritis". Presented at ACR 2011. 80 Tofacitinib (JAK Inhibitor) Combined with Atorvastatin • Background: Total cholesterol and LDL increased up to 25% in tofacitinib studies. No drug interactions between tofacitinib and atorvastatin • Objective: Evaluate safety and LDL with atorvastatin plus tofa • Design: 6 wk open run in of Tofa 10 mg bid and then 6 wk DB of tofa plus atorvastatin 10 mg vs tofa plus placebo • Endpoint: % change in LDL from wk 6 (start of DB) to wk 12 • Results: 35% reduction of LDL in the atorvastatin group to mean of 80 mg/dL (~2.0 mmol/L) Total cholesterol, Apo B and triglycerides also decreased No safety signal with the combination McInnes I, et al. Ann Rheum Dis 2011; 70(Suppl3):169. Cited by Weinblatt ME. Clinical Symposium " Looking Ahead to Kinase Inhibition in Rheumatoid Arthritis". Presented at ACR 2011. 81 Tofacitinib Phase 3 Monotherapy Study in RA • Objective: To compare the efficacy and safety of tofacitinib to adalimumab and to placebo in active RA • Subjects: 717 patients with active RA and inadequate response to methotrexate • Methodology: Subjects were randomized (4:4:4:1:1 ratio) to Tofacitinib 5 mg BID SC Q2W); Tofacitinib 10 mg BID SC Q2W; Adalimumab 40 mg SC Q2W; Placebo tofacitinib 5 mg BID SC Q2W; or Placebo tofacitinib 10 mg BID SC Q2W van Vollenhoven RF, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #408. Cited by Weinblatt ME. Clinical Symposium " Looking Ahead to Kinase Inhibition in Rheumatoid Arthritis". Presented at ACR 2011. 82 Tofacitinib Phase 3 Monotherapy Study in RA ACR20 DAS28 remission Δ HAQ Placebo 28.3% 1.1% - 0.24 Tofacitinib 5 mg 51.5%* 7.3%* - 0.55* Tofacitinib 10 mg 52.6%* 12.5%* - 0.61* Adalimumab 40 mg eow 47.2%* 6.2%* - 0.49* *p < 0.05 vs. placebo van Vollenhoven RF, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #408. Cited by Weinblatt ME. Clinical Symposium " Looking Ahead to Kinase Inhibition in Rheumatoid Arthritis". Presented at ACR 2011. 83 Tofacitinib Phase 3 Monotherapy Study in RA Months 0-3 Treatment group Months 3-6 AEs, n (%) SAEs , n (%) AEs, n (%) SAEs , n (%) Tofacitinib 5 mg BID (n=204) 106 (52.0) 12 (5.9) 67 (32.8) 10 (4.9) Tofacitinib 10 mg BID (n=201) 94 (46.8) 10 (5.0) 62 (30.8) 7 (3.5) Adalimumab 40 mg SC Q2W (n=204) 105 (51.5) 5 (2.5) 68 (33.3) 6 (2.9) Placebo (n=108 at mo. 3; n=59 mos. 3-6) 51 (47.2) 2 (1.9) 16 (27.1) 2 (3.4) Placebo to tofacitinib 5 mg BID (n=28) NA NA 7 (25.0) 0 Placebo to tofacitinib 10 mg BID (n=21) NA NA 9 (42.9) 0 van Vollenhoven RF, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #408. Cited by Weinblatt ME. Clinical Symposium " Looking Ahead to Kinase Inhibition in Rheumatoid Arthritis". Presented at ACR 2011. 84 What are the Potential Concerns with Tofacitinib for the Clinician? • Decrease in neutrophil counts (1.5% severe neutropenia with tofacitinib) • Decrease in hemoglobin • Significant elevation in serum creatinine without clinical impact • Perturbation of lipid profile (↑HDL, ↑LDL) • Elevated liver enzymes Placebo 17%, tofacitinib 28% (not proportional to dosage) van Vollenhoven RF, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #408. Tofacitinib in RA: Open-Label, Long-Term Extension Studies up to 36 Months % of patients with ACR responses ACR20 80 ACR50 ACR70 72.7 71.0 70 60 50 52.3 47.3 40 35.2 26.3 30 20 10 0 Month 1 Month 36 Data are for tofacitinib 5 mg or 10 mg groups combined (n=3227) Wollenhaupt J, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #407. Cited by Weinblatt ME. Clinical Symposium " Looking Ahead to Kinase Inhibition in Rheumatoid Arthritis". Presented at ACR 2011. 86 Tofacitinib in RA: Open-Label, Long-Term Extension Studies up to 36 Months • Mean tofacitinib exposure 309 days Total 3118 patient years • Serious adverse events: 11.3/100 patient-years ↓ Hb ↑ ALT ↓ WBC Creat. ↑ 33% in 12% of patients • Serious infectious events: 3.8/100 patient-years n=3227, Wollenhaupt J, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #407. Cited by Weinblatt ME. Clinical Symposium " Looking Ahead to Kinase Inhibition in Rheumatoid Arthritis". Presented at ACR 2011. 87 Fostamatinib (Oral SYK Inhibitor) for RA • Prodrug • Adverse effects are distinct from those of JAK inhibition Diarrhea Headaches ↑ BP (controllable) Weinblatt ME. Clinical Symposium " Looking Ahead to Kinase Inhibition in Rheumatoid Arthritis". Presented at ACR 2011. 88 Fostamatinib Phase II Trials in RA MTX-IR1 MTX-IR2 TNF-IR3 100 BID n=49 150 BID n=47 150 qd n=152 100 BID n=152 100 BID n=152 ACR20 Yes Yes Yes Yes No ACR50 Yes Yes Yes Yes No ACR70 Yes Yes No Yes No DAS ↓ NR NR Yes Yes No DAS ≤ 2.6 NR NR Yes Yes No HAQ ↓ NR NR Yes Yes NR ↑ SF-36 NR NR Yes Yes NR X-ray inhibition ND ND ND ND ND % no progression ND ND ND ND ND ND = not done in the study; NR = not reported in the abstract 1. Weinblatt ME, et al. Presented at ACR 2008; Abstract #1189. 2. Weinblatt ME, et al. Presented at ACR 2009; Abstract #LB2. 3. Genovese MC, et al. Presented at ACR 2009; Abstract #LB3. Cited by Fleischmann R. Clinical Symposium " Looking Ahead to Kinase Inhibition in Rheumatoid Arthritis". Presented at ACR 2011. VX-509 (Selective JAK3 Inhibitor) in RA: Phase II Study VX-509 Placebo (n=41) 25 mg BID (n=41) 50 mg BID (n=41) 100 mg BID (n=40) 150 mg BID (n=41) ACR20 29% 39% 61%* 65%† 66%† ACR50 7.3% 17% 32%‡ 38%§ 49%§ ACR70 2.4% 7.3% 12% 18%¥ 22%¶ Δ DAS28-CRP -1.2 -1.7 -2.6§ -2.7§ -3.1§ *p=0.007; †p=0.002; ‡p=0.011; §p≤0.001 ¥p=0.029 ¶p=0.026 Fleischmann R, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #L3 90 Safety of Kinase Inhibitors in RA Tofacitinib1 Fostamatinib2 JAK 1/23 3030 552 136 Neutropenia Elevated lipids Elevated LFTs ↑ creatinine Infection (URI, UTI, flu) Opportunistic infection Herpes Zoster Number of patients Diarrhea Hypertension Vertigo Headache 1. Tofacitinib phase II & III; 2. Fostamatinib phase II; 3. JAK 1/2 phase II. Cited by Fleischmann R. Clinical Symposium " Looking Ahead to Kinase Inhibition in Rheumatoid Arthritis". Presented at ACR 2011. Tofacitinib: What is Not Known in 2011 • What is the optimal starting dose of tofacitinib? • Is 5 mg as effective as 10 mg?; Is 10 mg as safe as 5 mg? • Does tofacitinib require MTX to be effective? • Is the combination more effective than tofacitinib monotherapy? • In MTX naïve patients: • Is tofacitinib clinically the same as MTX or better? • Is tofacitinib more likely to inhibit radiographic progression? • If a patient fails to achieve a satisfactory response to 5 mg, will they respond to 10 mg? • If a patient responds exceptionally well to 10 mg, will the patient continue to respond to 5 mg? • If the patient goes into a true remission with tofacitinib, can it be withdrawn and the patient maintain benefit? Fleischmann R. Clinical Symposium " Looking Ahead to Kinase Inhibition in Rheumatoid Arthritis". Presented at ACR 2011. Imaging of Rheumatic Disease: Ultrasonography and Dual-emission X-ray Absorptiometry Highlights of an ACR Concurrent Abstract Session, Sunday, November 6 Summarized by Dr. Edith Villeneuve 93 List of Presentations in this Section Speaker Title El Miedany YM Imaging As An Outcome Measure in Early Inflammatory Arthritis: Monitoring Disease Activity and Patients’ Response to Therapy Using Ultrasonography 808 Yoshimi R Ultrasonography Is a Potent Tool for Prediction of Ongoing Joint Destruction During Clinical Remission of Rheumatoid Arthritis 809 Concurrent Abstract Session: Imaging of Rheumatic Disease. ACR 2011; Sun., Nov. 6. Abstract # 94 Ultrasound As An Outcome Measure in Early Arthritis: Study Design • Subjects: 121 RA patients with sustained DAS28 remission for 6 months 65 on DMARDs, 56 on TNFi • Methods: Data Collected – PROMs (self-reported TJC) – US of 54 joints • GS 0-3, PD 0-3, score per joint and total score Treat-to-target of US remission (GS=0 and PD=0) Post-tx correlation with clinical outcome measures were assessed El Miedany YM. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #808. Clinical Outcome Measures in Ultrasound-assessed 28 Joints Variable US Findings p value US arthritis US remission DAS-28 2.31 (0.2) 2.32 (0.2) 0.986 TJC 28 (Physician) 1.24 (0.4) 1.23 (0.4) 0.942 TJC 28 (Patient) 1.91 (0.6) 1.3 (0.6) 0.022 SJC 28 1.19 (0.4) 0 (0.0) <0.001 PGA 11.9 (4.0) 9.6 (4.4) 0.028* MS 10.7 (5.8) 8.1 (4.4) 0.021 Fn. Dis 0.56 (0.1) 0.73 (0.3) <0.001 QoL 0.50 (0.1) 0.73 (0.5) 0.026 ESR 18.9 (5.2) 19.9 (6.9) 0.554 CRP 9.7 (3.6) 9.6 (3.2) 0.860 NB: Results were similar for 28- and 44-joint assessments El Miedany YM. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #808. Ultrasound As An Outcome Measure in Early Arthritis: Results • US findings had an impact on management of patients: 31.1% DMARD dose ↑ 22% DMARD changed 21.6% biologic tx frequency ↑ 52.6% of affected scan joint received IA steroid • At subsequent visit, US improvement was associated with clinical outcome measures in response to treatment and helped maintained pts in remission El Miedany YM. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #808. Ultrasound As An Outcome Measure in Early Arthritis: Interpretation • These data suggest that US may be a better tool to accurately evaluate clinical remission and may provide better treatment / outcomes for patients • However, more stringent definition of remission is now recommended as the target • Still need to demonstrate: Using US would have changed management Long-term outcomes of using US remission as target compared to clinical remission El Miedany YM. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #808. Ultrasound As a Tool for Prediction of Ongoing Joint Destruction During Clinical Remission of RA • Objective: To assess whether US of 22 joints can predict long-term radiographic progression during sustained clinical DAS28 remission • Subjects: RA patients from a single outpatient clinics who fulfilled criteria of clinical remission DAS28-ESR < 2.6 or DAS28-CRP < 2.3 • Methods: US performed by rheumatologists blind to the clinical findings Hand X-ray films assessed using modified total Sharp score (mTSS) by a rheumatologist unaware of the US findings Yoshimi R. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #809. Ultrasound for Prediction of Ongoing Joint Destruction: US Assessment • PD signals of 22 joints • Each joint scored Grade 0-3) • Total PD score = Sum of PD scores of all 22 joints Yoshimi R. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #809. Ultrasound for Prediction of Ongoing Joint Destruction: Patient Characteristics Characteristic Total no. of cases = 31 Age 55.2 ± 13.4 years Sex M: 4 cases F: 27 cases Stage Ⅰ: 9 cases, Ⅱ: 15 cases, Ⅲ: 3 cases, Ⅳ: 4 cases RF (+): 23 cases, (-): 4 cases, Unknown: 4 cases Duration of RA Median 5 y 0 m (2 y 6 m – 16 y) Duration of remission Median 1 y 4 m (2 m – 6 y 5 m) DAS28-ESR 2.06 ± 0.63 DAS28-CRP 1.58 ± 0.47 Treatment Biologics: 13 cases (IFX 4, ETA 9) DMARDs: 28 cases (MTX 23, SSZ 6, TAC 1) Steroid: 9 cases (PSL 1 - 5 mg/d) Drug-free: 1 case Yoshimi R. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #809. Ultrasound for Prediction of Ongoing Joint Destruction: Patient Disposition Yoshimi R. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #809. Ultrasound for Prediction of Ongoing Joint Destruction: Radiographic Progression & Baseline Parameters No radiographic progression Radiographic progression P value Total PD score 0.87 ± 1.15 6.00 ± 6.44 0.0099 Total gray score 8.80 ± 5.78 12.6 ± 12.4 0.36 SJC 0.33 ± 0.79 1.29 ± 0.70 0.017 TJC 0.13 ± 0.34 0.57 ± 0.49 0.032 gVAS (mm) 9.40 ± 9.58 12.7 ± 4.40 0.41 ESR (mm/h) 10.2 ± 5.94 18.6 ± 16.2 0.11 CRP (mg/dl) 0.12 ± 0.15 0.08 ± 0.12 0.60 MMP-3 (ng/ml) 96.8 ± 110 62.1 ± 19.7 0.44 RF (U/ml) 73.8 ±89.5 86.8 ± 68.1 0.77 Variable * No difference for age, disease duration, remission duration, MTX dose, Treatment between the 2 groups Yoshimi R. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #809. Total PD Score & Radiographic Progression No radiographic progression Radiographic progression No. of patients 9 • X-ray progression is strongly associated with total PD score but also with TJC and SJC • X-ray progression was not found in patients having total PD score of 0 or 1 6 3 0 0 1 2 3 4 Total PD Score ≥5 Yoshimi R. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #809. Ultrasound for Prediction of Ongoing Joint Destruction: Interpretation • NPV of total PD score of 0 and 1 is very interesting • Added value of PD > 1 in an individual patients still needs to be determined: Does is it add to physical exam? How do you differentiate a progressor from a non-progressor in an individual patient? Yoshimi R. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #809. Discovery 2011 Highlights of an ACR Plenary Session, Sunday, November 6 Summarized by Dr. Robert Offer 106 Presentation in this Section Speaker Title BozaiteGluosniene R Reduced Cardiovascular Risk with Use of Methotrexate and Tumor Necrosis Factor-α Inhibitors in Patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis Plenary Session: Discovery 2011. ACR 2011; Sun., Nov. 6. Abstract # 719 107 Impact of MTX + TNFi Treatment on Cardiovascular Risk in RA • Design: RA inception cohort using electronic health records • Subjects: 1718 RA patients without history of CVD • Primary outcome: Incident CVD, including any o the following: Coronary artery disease (CAD) Cardiac or arterial revasc. procedure Stroke / TIA Abdominal aortic aneurysm Peripheral artery disease Bozaite-Gluosniene R. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #719. Impact of MTX + TNFi Treatment on Cardiovascular Risk in RA: Co-variates Category Co-variates Demographics Age, gender, ethnicity Comorbidities BMI (kg/m2), SBP/DBP, HTN, hyperlipidemia, diabetes Laboratory measures ESR, CRP, LDL, RF, anti-CCP antibodies Medications NSAIDs, glucocorticoids, hydroxychloroquine, MTX, TNF-α inhibitors, statins Propensity score (by multivariate regression models) For probability of a patient taking MTX or TNF-α inhibitor Bozaite-Gluosniene R. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #719. Risk of Developing CVD by Cumulative TNF-α Inhibitor Use Never ≤ 17 mo >17 mo No. of patients 1147 286 285 No. of CVD events 102 16 9 1.04 (0.57-1.88) 0.31 (0.15-0.63) HR* (95% CI) * Adjusted for propensity score, age, gender, race, propensity score, body mass index, history of hypertension, hyperlipidemia and diabetes, ESR, CRP, RF and anti CCP antibodies and use of NSAIDs, glucocorticoids, HCQ and MTX Bozaite-Gluosniene R. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #719. Risk of Developing CVD by Cumulative Methotrexate Use Never ≤ 22 mo > 22 mo No. of patients 652 532 534 No. of CVD events 70 35 22 HR* (95% CI) 1.15 (0.71-1.86) 0.28 (0.16-0.49) * Adjusted for age, gender, race, propensity score, body mass index, history of hypertension, hyperlipidemia and diabetes, ESR, CRP, RF and anti-CCP antibodies, and use of glucocorticoids, HCQ, TNF-α inhibitors, and NSAIDs Bozaite-Gluosniene R. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #719. Impact of MTX + TNFi Treatment on Cardiovascular Risk in RA: Conclusions • In this inception RA cohort, use of MTX >22 months was independently associated with a 72% reduction in risk of incident CVD • Use of TNF-α inhibitors >17 months was independently associated with a 69% reduction in risk of incident CVD • The findings are biologically plausible, given the role of inflammation in atherosclerosis and the potent anti-inflammatory effects of these medications that may take several months to manifest their effect • These findings suggest that these medications are protective against CVD in a group of patients at high risk for CVD Bozaite-Gluosniene R. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #719. Late-breaking Abstracts Highlights of an ACR Concurrent Abstract Session, Tuesday, November 8 Summarized by Dr. Janet Pope 113 List of Presentations in this Section Speaker / primary author Title Burmester GR Mavrilimumab (an Anti-GM-CSFRα Monoclonal Antibody) in Subjects with Rheumatoid Arthritis: Results of a Phase 2 Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Study L7 Genovese M Sarilumab for the Treatment of Moderate-toSevere Rheumatoid Arthritis: Results of a Phase 2, Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled, International Study L2 Tak PP Safety and Efficacy of Oral Chemokine Receptor 1 Antagonist CCX354-C in a Phase 2 Rheumatoid Arthritis Study L11 Concurrent abstract session: Late-breaking abstracts. ACR 2011; Tues., Nov. 8. Abstract # 114 List of Presentations in this Section (cont'd) Speaker / primary author Title Becker LM BCX4208 Combined with Allopurinol Increases Response Rates in Patients with Gout Who Fail to Reach Goal Range Serum Urate on Allopurinol Alone: A Randomized, Double-Blind, PlaceboControlled Trial L10 Ko VW Is Centre-Based Rehabilitation Superior to HomeBased Rehabilitation After Knee Replacement? A Single-Blind, Randomised Controlled Trial L6 Brown JP Six Years of Denosumab Treatment in Postmenopausal Women with Osteoporosis: Results From the First Three Years of the FREEDOM Extension L8 Concurrent abstract session: Late-breaking abstracts. ACR 2011; Tues., Nov. 8. Abstract # 115 Mavrilimumab for RA: Phase 2 Study • Subjects: 264 patients from Eastern Europe & Japan) with moderate-to-severe RA Stable MTX ≥ 4 wks prior to screening DAS28 ≥ 3.2 at screening • Randomization: 2:1 active/placebo • Primary endpoint: DAS28-CRP decrease >1.2 from baseline at week 12 • Secondary endpoints: DAS28-CRP remission ACR20/50/70 HAQ-DI Safety profile Burmester GR. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #L7. 116 Mavrilimumab for RA: Time to Onset of DAS28 Response & Remission Response Remission Response Remission Burmester GR. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #L7. 117 Mavrilimumab for RA: ACR20, 50 & 70 at Day 85 Burmester GR. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #L7. 118 Mavrilimumab for RA: ACR50 and 70 By Visit ACR50 ACR70 ACR50 ACR70 Burmester GR. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #L7. 119 Mavrilimumab for RA: Conclusions from a Phase 2 Study • Mavrilimumab was associated with: A rapid (within 2 wks) and significant clinical effect compared with placebo A safety profile over the first 3 months of dosing that had no reported serious and opportunistic infections, hypersensitivity reactions, anaphylaxis, clinically meaningful adverse events, or laboratory abnormalities up to the highest dose tested • The results from this study suggest that suppressing macrophage activity by targeting GMCSFRα may be a novel approach in the treatment of RA and supports future clinical studies Burmester GR. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #L7. 120 Sarilumab for Moderate-to-Severe RA: Phase 2 Study • Sarilumab = fully human monoclonal antibody directed against IL-6Rα • Objective: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of 5 dose regimens of subcutaneous sarilumab vs. placebo (both with MTX) in RA • Subjects: 306 adults with active, moderate-tosevere RA with inadequate response to MTX • Method: 12-week double-blind trial Subjects randomized to sarilumab 100 mg q2w, 150 mg q2w, 100 mg qw, 200 mg q2w, 150 mg qw, or placebo Primary endpoint: % achieving ACR20 at Week 12 Genovese MC, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #L2. Sarilumab for Moderate-to-Severe RA: Phase 2 Study ACR20 ACR50 ACR70 % achieving ACR responses 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Placebo 100 mg q2w 150 mg 100 mg qw 200 mg 150 mg qw q2w q2w Sarilumab dose Genovese MC, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #L2. Oral Chemokine Receptor 1 Antagonist CCX354-C in RA: Phase 2 Study • Objective: To evaluate safety, tolerability and efficacy of CCX354-C in subjects with RA with inadequate response to MTX • Subjects: 160 adult subjects with RA, on stable dose of MTX ≥ 8 SJC, 8 TJC (based on 66/68 joint count) CRP > 5 mg/L • Methods: Randomized, 12-week double-blind, placebocontrolled, parallel group Stratification based on previous biologics use, and current corticosteroid use Randomized to placebo, CCX354-C 100 mg bid or 200 mg qd Efficacy measures: ACR, DAS28, CRP, ESR, bone turnover markers Tak PP. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #L11. Oral Chemokine Receptor 1 Antagonist CCX354-C in RA: Phase 2 Study Placebo 100 mg BID 200 mg QD P-value ITT, Day 1 Eligible Subjects 30% 44% 56% 0.014 ITT, Including Day 1 Ineligible Subjects 39% 43% 52% 0.17 Biologic-naïve 35% 42% 57% 0.059 Day 1 Eligible, Biologics-naïve 27% 42% 62% 0.002 ACR20 at Week 12 Tak PP. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #L11. BCX4208 Combined with Allopurinol in Gout • BCX4208 = Purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) inhibitor • Objective: To evaluate BCX4208 therapy added on to allopurinol 300mg in allopurinol inadequate responders • Subjects: 279 patients with gout Baseline sUA ≥ 6.0 mg/dL after 2 weeks on 300mg of allopurinol • Methods: Primary endpoint: % patients with sUA < 6mg/dL at week 12 Long-term extension is ongoing Becker LM. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #L10. BCX4208 Combined with Allopurinol in Gout: Primary Efficacy Results % achieving sUA < 6mg/dL at week 12 60% 49%† 50% 45%* 39%* 40% 33% 30% 20% 18% 10% 0% Placebo 5 mg 10 mg 20 mg BCX4208 dose *p<0.05; †p<0.001 Becker LM. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #L10. 40 mg Centre-based vs. Home-based Rehabilitation After Knee Replacement: Single-Blind RCT • Subjects: 249 patients requiring supervised physical therapy after total knee replacement • Methods: Two-weeks post-surgery, subjects randomized to: – 12 sessions of 1-to-1 therapy – 12 sessions of group based therapy – Home exercises supplemented with two 1to-1 sessions and a telephone follow-up • Results: Supervised outpatient sessions are not superior to a monitored home programme after TKR Ko VW, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #L6. Denosumab for Postmenopausal Women with Osteoporosis: 6-year Results from the FREEDOM Extension • Objectives: To describe the effects of up to 6 years of denosumab treatment on: Bone turnover and bone density Safety: incidence of new vertebral and nonvertebral fractures, incidence of adverse events • Subjects: 2,207 patients crossed over from placebo to denosumab after double-blind period 2,343 patients treated with long-term denosumab from the start of the trial Brown JP. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #L8. Denosumab for Postmenopausal Women with Osteoporosis: % Change in BMD at the Lumbar Spine and Total Hip *p < 0.05 vs FREEDOM baseline; †p < 0.0001 vs FREEDOM and extension baseline. Brown JP. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #L8. Denosumab for Postmenopausal Women with Osteoporosis: Conclusions from the FREEDOM Extension Study • Denosumab treatment for 6 years (long-term group): Maintained the reduction in bone turnover Continued to significantly increase BMD year to year Was associated with low incidences of new vertebral and nonvertebral fractures Remained well tolerated • Denosumab treatment for 3 years (cross-over group) largely reproduced the observations in the original FREEDOM denosumab group *p < 0.05 vs FREEDOM baseline; †p < 0.0001 vs FREEDOM and extension baseline. Brown JP. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #L8. Spondylarthropathies: Recent Insights Highlights of an ACR Clinical Symposium, Tuesday, November 8 Summarized by Dr. Majed Khraishi 131 List of Presentations in this Section Speaker / primary author Title Maksymowych WP TNF Inhibition and Structural Progression in Ankylosing Spondylitis NA Kingsley GH Is Methotrexate a Disease Modifying Agent in Psoriatic Arthritis? NA Khraishi M Analysis of Radiographic Changes in Patients with Early Psoriatic Arthritis 1548 Clinical Symposium: Spondylarthropathies: Recent Insights. ACR 2011; Tues., Nov. 8. Abstract # 132 Hypothesis: Inflammation and Ankylosis Are Uncoupled in AS Pathogenesis Lories RJ, et al: Arthritis Rheum 2007; 56(2):489-97. Cited by Maksymowych WP. Clinical Symposium " Spondylarthropathies: Recent Insights". Presented at ACR 2011. Hypothesis: Pathogenesis of New Bone in Ankylosing Spondylitis Maksymowych WP. Clinical Symposium " Spondylarthropathies: Recent Insights". Presented at ACR 2011. Evidence for Methotrexate in PsA: Observations from the NOR-DMARD Registry • After 6 months MTX PsA and RA patients show improvements in most disease activity measures and patient reported outcomes In adjusted analysis less improvement with PsA, but changes in same range as RA EULAR good/moderate responses were achieved by 24%/57% PsA and 33%/70% RA • At 2 years Retention rates on MTX were 65% PsA and 66% RA Only minor differences in reasons for discontinuation Lie E, et al. Ann Rheum Dis. 2010; 69(4):671-6. Cited by Kingsley GH. Clinical Symposium " Spondylarthropathies: Recent Insights". Presented at ACR 2011. Evidence for Methotrexate in PsA: MTX in Psoriatic Arthritis (MIPA) Trial • Hypothesis: MTX improves disease activity and function in psoriatic arthritis • Design: 6-month RCT comparing MTX with placebo • Inclusion criteria: Synovitis in ≥ 1 joint, psoriasis skin/nails • Exclusion criteria: Other arthropathies, recent steroids/DMARDs, contra-indications to MTX • Interventions: MTX (target 15mg/wk) or placebo • Primary outcome: Psoriatic Arthritis Response Criteria • Secondary outcomes: Patient & assessor global assessments, HAQ & Pain, TJC, SJC, ESR, CRP, composite measures Kingsley GH. Clinical Symposium " Spondylarthropathies: Recent Insights". Presented at ACR 2011. Evidence for Methotrexate in PsA: MTX in Psoriatic Arthritis (MIPA) Trial Placebo % of patients % of patients MTX 3 months Kingsley GH. Clinical Symposium " Spondylarthropathies: Recent Insights". Presented at ACR 2011. 6 months Evidence for Methotrexate in PsA: MTX in Psoriatic Arthritis (MIPA) Trial MTX Placebo Kingsley GH. Clinical Symposium " Spondylarthropathies: Recent Insights". Presented at ACR 2011. Evidence for Methotrexate in PsA: Conclusions from the MIPA Trial • MTX In PsA: Improves symptoms Has no effect on joint counts or acute phase response Is a “symptom modifying agent” and not a “DMARD” Kingsley GH. Clinical Symposium " Spondylarthropathies: Recent Insights". Presented at ACR 2011. Radiographic Changes in Patients with Early Psoriatic Arthritis • Key Findings: Radiological damage was detected in 32% of patients with Early PsA and was associated with increased CRP 76% of those with damaged acquired it within the 1st year of symptom onset The increased incidence of axial and DIP joint involvement are in agreement with previous studies showing that they represent the most common sites in PsA Asymmetric oligoarthritis was not a dominant pattern in this cohort Khraishi M, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1548. 140 Impact of Body Weight in Rheumatic Disease Selected Highlights from Various ACR Sessions Summarized by Dr. Robert Offer 141 List of Presentations in this Section Speaker / primary author Title Smolen JS Impact of Body Mass Index on Response to Etanercept Therapy in Subjects with Moderately Active Rheumatoid Arthritis in the PRESERVE Trial 410 Heimans L Body Mass Index Is Associated with Decreased Response to Initial and Delayed Treatment with Dose Escalated Infliximab in Patients with Recent Onset Rheumatoid Arthritis 416 Ottaviani S Body Mass Index Influences the Response to Infliximab in Ankylosing Spondylitis 530 Various ACR sessions. ACR 2011; Nov. 6-8. Abstract # 142 List of Presentations in this Section Speaker / Primary author Title Wolfe F The Effect of Body Mass Index On the Outcomes of Rheumatoid Arthritis 2586 Greenberg JD Effect of Weight, Body Mass Index and Weight-Based Dosing on Persistency of Anti-TNFs in Psoriatic Arthritis 1310 Katz PP Identifying Obesity in Rheumatoid Arthritis: Current BMI Definition of Obesity Does Not Accurately Reflect Body Composition 799 Various ACR sessions. ACR 2011; Nov. 6-8. Abstract # 143 Does BMI Affect Outcomes With Biologics in RA? Probability of DAS28 Remission* Response to ETN-MTX by BMI category at Week 36 in Subjects w/ Moderate RA % of subjects Variable BMI BMI 25 BMI <25 kg/m2 <30 kg/m2 ≥30 kg/m2 p value Remission (<2.6) 70.8 68.1 56.7 0.01 LDAS (<3.2) 87.5 86.5 79.5 0.05 Remission (≤2.8) 29.5 28.0 17.3 0.02 LDA (<10) 85.4 81.2 78.7 0.06 Remission (≤3.3) 27.7 26.7 16.0 0.02 LDA (<11) 86.8 83.8 81.6 0.13 DAS28 CDAI SDAI Smolen JS, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #410. Is Being Overweight / Obese a Predictor of Poor Response to Infliximab? (BeSt Sub-analysis) • Patients with high BMI have lower chance of responding to infliximab, even if the infliximab is increased up to 10 mg/kg • Other predictors of poor response were female sex and high DAS Heimans L, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #416. BMI Proportion Achieving DAS≤2.4 x 6 months <25 84% 25-30 68% >30 64% Does BMI Affect Outcomes in SpA Patients Treated with Biologics? • Subjects: 155 patients with active AS, treated with infliximab 5 mg/kg (retrospectively identified) • Outcomes: 50% improvements in BASDAI, VAS pain, CRP, and total NSAID dose • Results: Outcomes with infliximab were significantly better at 6 months for all measures with BMI ≤ 30 kg/m2 compared to BMI >30 kg/m2 (p values 0.0001 to 0.0275) Ottaviani S, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #530. The Effect of Body Mass Index on Mortality and Clinical Status in Rheumatoid Arthritis • Objectives: To determine the % of RA patients who are underweight, normal weight, overweight and obese To define the relationship of BMI groups with CVD & all-cause mortality To quantify the effect of BMI status on comorbidity, symptoms, treatment and direct medical costs Wolfe F. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #2586. The Effect of Body Mass Index on Mortality and Clinical Status in Rheumatoid Arthritis • Methods: 24,535 RA patients over 12.3 years Divided patients into 3 age groups, <50, 50-70, and >70 years – Cox regression models within each age stratum BMI categories (kg/m2) – <18.5 (underweight) – 18.5 to <25 (normal weight, reference category) – 25 to <30 (overweight) – ≥30 (obese) Wolfe F. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #2586. Adjusted All-cause Mortality in RA by Body Mass Index Age group (yrs) RR (95% CI) vs. Normal Weight (BMI 18.5 - <25 kg/m2) Underweight (BMI <18.5 kg/m2) Overweight (BMI 25 - <30 kg/m2) Obese (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2) <50 1.3 (0.6 – 3.1) 0.7 (0.5 – 1.1) 1.0 (0.7 – 1.5) 50-70 2.1 (1.6 – 2.8)* 0.9 (0.8 – 1.0)* 0.9 (0.8 – 1.0)* >70 1.5 (1.2 – 1.8)* 0.8 (0.7 – 0.9)* 0.8 (0.7 – 0.9)* All 1.9 (1.6 – 2.2)* 0.8 (0.7 – 0.8)* 0.6 (0.5 – 0.6)* The paradoxical protective effect of obesity over age 50 is unexplained as every 5 unit increase in BMI was associated with 26% higher incidence of diabetes and 35% higher incidence of hypertension. *Statistically significant vs. normal weight Wolfe F. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #2586. Predictors of Efficacy of TNF-inhibitors in Psoriatic Arthritis Hazard Ratio 95% CI Fixed dosing (vs. weightbased) anti-TNF 1.38 0.90, 2.11 0.140 BMI (≥30) vs BMI <30 1.52 1.08, 2.14 0.017 Pt. Pain (≥4 vs <4) 1.48 1.05, 2.10 0.026 Female vs Male 1.64 1.17, 2.29 0.004 Disabled 1.78 1.00, 3.16 0.050 History of CVD 2.68 1.31, 5.49 0.007 Duration of PsA 0.98 0.96, 1.00 0.06 Greenberg JD. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1310. p-value Need for New Definition of Obesity in RA • N=141 from a long term RA cohort • Compared body composition measured by DEXA (% body fat) to BMI (>30 kg/m2) Total group: % obese Men: % obese Women: % obese DEXA 58% 80% 44% BMI 27% 29% 26% • RA patients have less muscle and more fat than predicted by BMI • This study found best BMI definition for obesity in RA is > 24.7 for men and > 25.7 for women Katz PP. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #799. Impact of Environmental Health on Autoimmunity Highlights of an ACR Clinical Symposium, Sunday, November 6 Summarized by Dr. Hector Arbillaga 152 List of Presentations in this Section Speaker Title Miller F The Environment and Autoimmune Diseases – Where we stand in 2011 James JA The Role of Gene X Environment Interactions in Autoimmunity Cooper GS Smoking and Silica Exposure-Models for Exploring Environmental Triggers of Disease Clinical Symposium: Impact of Environmental Health on Autoimmunity. ACR 2011; Sun., Nov. 6. 153 Chemical Factors Associated with Autoimmune Diseases • Crystalline silica exposure contributes to development of RA, SScl, SLE and antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA)-related diseases including vasculitis and glomerulonephritis • Solvent exposure contributes to development of SScl • Smoking contributes to the development of anticitrullinated protein/peptide antibody (ACPA)-positive and anti-rheumatoid factor (RF)-positive RA, and there is an interaction with the HLA shared epitope Miller F. Clinical Symposium "Impact of Environmental Health on Autoimmunity". Presented at ACR 2011. Physical Factor Associated with Autoimmune Diseases • An inverse association exists between increased ultraviolet radiation exposure and the decreased risk of development of MS Miller F. Clinical Symposium "Impact of Environmental Health on Autoimmunity". Presented at ACR 2011. Biological factors Associated with Autoimmune Diseases • Gluten contributes to the development of GSE • Dietary intake of certain lots of L-tryptophan contribute to the development of eosinophilia myalgia syndrome • Dietary intake of 1,2-di-oleyl ester (DEPAP) and oleic anilide-contaminated rapeseed oil contributes to the development of toxic oil syndrome Miller F. Clinical Symposium "Impact of Environmental Health on Autoimmunity". Presented at ACR 2011. Expert Panel Conclusions on Environment Factors for Autoimmune Diseases • Epidemiology and other approaches have and will continue to contribute to our knowledge of environmental risk factors for AID • More cost-effective, validated methods for assessing human exposures are needed • More research into phenotypes, genotypes, synergies of multiple exposures and mechanisms are needed • Understanding the effects of the timing of exposures (life course, latencies) and dose-response effects are critical • Increased resources in this area are justified as knowledge of the risks conferred by environmental factors in specific genetic contexts could pave the way for prevention of certain AIDs in the future Miller F. Clinical Symposium "Impact of Environmental Health on Autoimmunity". Presented at ACR 2011. The Role of Gene X Environment Interactions in Autoimmunity: Summary • Current data support a temporal association of EBV seroconversion with onset of lupus autoantibodies • Lupus patients mount a different humoral immune response to EBNA-1 compared to normal controls • 24% of FDRs make anti-PPPGRRP compared to <3% of controls (p<10-11); Anti-PPPGMRPP correlates with anti-PPPGRRP and anti-PPPGMRPP correlated with anti-Sm • SLE patients with select IRF5 haplotypes show differential expression of B cell, interferon and TLR associated genes compared to low-risk haplotype patients James JA. Clinical Symposium "Impact of Environmental Health on Autoimmunity". Presented at ACR 2011. 158 The Role of Gene X Environment Interactions in Autoimmunity: Summary, cont'd • Multiple-sclerosis-associated HLA associations show differential interactions with herpes viral exposures and vitamin D deficiency in pediatric MS • IRF5 has a number of Vitamin-D responsive elements • Extensive work remains to more fully understand environment and genetic interactions in autoimmune disease etiology and pathogenesis James JA. Clinical Symposium "Impact of Environmental Health on Autoimmunity". Presented at ACR 2011. 159 Smoking and Rheumatoid Arthritis: Influence on Pathogenesis Smoking Generation of modified peptides (citrullination) in lungs Activation of adaptive immune response - Antigen presentation (DRB1-SE binding) - T-cell activation (PTPN22) "Priming" for systemic immunity Cooper GS. Clinical Symposium "Impact of Environmental Health on Autoimmunity". Presented at ACR 2011. 160 Silica Dust and Autoimmune Disease • NOT Limited to a single disease RA, scleroderma, SLE, systemic vasculitis Breadth of the research underappreciated by our (narrow) individual research perspectives • NOT limited to very high exposures / silicosis patients Relevant for disease seen in community settings (not just occupational cohorts of miners) Relevant for women (but may need different/better exposure assessments for women) • Short-term, high intensity exposures may be relevant Does an OSHA 8-hour TWA PEL provide adequate protection for autoimmune rheumatic diseases? Cooper GS. Clinical Symposium "Impact of Environmental Health on Autoimmunity". Presented at ACR 2011. 161 Orthopedics, Low Back Pain, and Rehabilitation Highlights of an ACR Poster Session, Monday, November 7 Summarized by Dr. Anthony Russell 162 List of Presentations in this Session Abstract # Primary author Title Micca JL The Efficacy and Safety of Duloxetine Treatment in Older Patients with Osteoarthritis Knee Pain: A Post Hoc, Subgroup Analysis of Data From 2 Placebo-Controlled Trials 1094 Fidelholtz J A Phase 3 Placebo- and OxycodoneControlled Study of Tanezumab in Adults with Osteoarthritis 1095 Feist E Efficacy and Safety of Tanezumab Added on to Diclofenac in Patients with Knee or Hip Osteoarthritis (NCT00864097) 1096 Poster session: Orthopedics, Low Back Pain, and Rehabilitation. ACR 2011; Mon., Nov. 7. 163 Duloxetine for Osteoarthritis in Older Adults: Pooled Subgroup Analysis • Objective: To examine the efficacy and safety of duloxetine (DLX) treatment in older aged patients with OA knee pain • Methods: Post-hoc analysis of two 3-month RCTs in patients with symptomatic knee OA Patients were randomized to DLX 60mg QD vs. placebo for 7 weeks For the remaining 6 weeks: – Study I: DLX patients were re-randomized to receive either DLX 60 mg QD or 120 mg QD – Study II, only DLX non-responders had their dose increased to 120 mg Pain severity (0-10) was assessed daily and recorded in patient diaries Treatment-emergent adverse events were evaluated Micca JL, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1094. 164 Duloxetine for Osteoarthritis in Older Adults: Changes in Daily Pain Diaries (< 65 years) *p < 0.05; †p < 0.01; ‡p < 0.001 Micca JL, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1094. (≥ 65 years) 165 Phase 3 Study of Tanezumab for Adults with Osteoarthritis • Objective: To investigate the efficacy & safety of tanezumab (TNZ) vs. oxycodone continuous release (OXY) as analgesic treatment for knee or hip OA • Methods: Double-blind, placebo-controlled, 16-week study Patients received up to two doses of TNZ (10 or 5 mg IV in 8-week intervals), OXY (10-40 mg every 12 hours; uptitrated & modified according to tolerability & pain relief or placebo after prior analgesic pain medication washout Primary endpoint: WOMAC Pain subscale score • Early trial completion: Study was only partially completed due to a FDA-imposed clinical hold so primary endpoint timing was amended from Week 16 to Week 8 to maximize planned analyses Fidelholtz J, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1095. 166 Phase 3 Study of Tanezumab for Adults with Osteoarthritis: Week 8 Results Fidelholtz J, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1095. 167 Tanezumab Added to Diclofenac for Hip or Knee OA • Objective: To evaluate efficacy and safety of i.v. tanezumab (TZB) added to oral diclofenac sustained release (DSR) in patients with hip or knee OA • Methods: Randomized, double-blind, placebocontrolled study Patients (N=604) with moderate to severe knee or hip OA tolerating stable oral diclofenac 150 mg/day were randomized to i.v. TZB 2.5, 5, or 10 mg, or placebo at weeks 0, 8, and 16 Co-primary efficacy endpoints: WOMAC Pain subscale, WOMAC Physical Function subscale, and Patient Global Assessment of OA at week 16 Feist E, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1096. 168 Tanezumab Added to Diclofenac for Hip or Knee OA PBO: Placebo; DSR: Diclofenac sustained release; TZB: tanezumab Feist E, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1096. Osteoporosis and Metabolic Bone Disease: Clinical Aspects and Pathogenesis Highlights of an ACR Concurrent Abstract Session, Monday, November 7 Summarized by Dr. Philip Baer 170 List of Presentations in this Section Speaker Title Amin S Fracture Risk Is Increased in Young Women with Rheumatoid Arthritis 1632 Does Identification of Prevalent Vertebral Fracture on Densitometric Vertebral Fracture Assessment (VFA) in Clinical Practice Influence Physician Prescribing Behavior? 1634 Schoushoe JT Concurrent abstract session: Osteoporosis and Metabolic Bone Disease: Clinical Aspects and Pathogenesis. ACR 2011; Mon., Nov. 7. Abstract # 171 Fracture Risk By Age and Sex in RA Hazard ratio (95% CI) All < 50 years ≥ 50 years OP Fx 1.7 (1.4 – 2.2) 4.3 (2.4 – 7.8) 1.4 (1.1 – 1.8) Any Fx 1.6 (1.3 – 1.9) 2.4 (1.6 – 3.5) 1.4 (1.1 – 1.7) OP Fx 1.6 (1.1 – 2.4) 1.4 (0.7 – 3.0) 1.8 (1.1 – 2.8) Any Fx 1.4 (1.02 – 1.9) 1.7 (0.9 – 3.2) 1.4 (0.9 – 2.0) Women Men *excludes any severe trauma fracture Amin S. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #1632. Fracture Risk in RA: All Women Amin S. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #1632. Fracture Risk in RA: Women With Baseline Age < 50 Years Amin S. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #1632. Fracture Risk in RA: Women < 50 Years & Follow-up Limited to Age 50 Years Amin S. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #1632. Fracture Risk in RA: All Men Amin S. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #1632. Fracture Risk in RA: Men With Baseline Age < 50 Years Amin S. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #1632. Fracture Risk By Age and Sex in RA: Conclusions • Men >50 yrs with RA appear to be at increased risk for future fracture, but few fractures occurred before age 50 years • Women <50 yrs with RA are not only at high risk for future fracture, but their fracture risk is increased even before they reach age 50 years • Fracture-prevention strategies for young women with RA are thus important to consider Amin S. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #1632. Influence of Identified Vertebral Fractures on Prescribing Behavior • Objective: To determine whether the performance of a vertebral fracture assessment (VFA) influences provider prescribing behavior? • Methods: Merging of Electronic Health Record and Bone Densitometry Data (n=45,889) Association of Performance of VFA with use of fracture prevention medication Data collection ongoing Schoushoe JT. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #1634. Standing Orders for VFA At This Center • Low Bone Density (T-score of lumbar spine, total hip, or femoral neck ≤ -1.5) PLUS one of the following Age ≥ 65 years Height loss ≥ 1.5 inches (4 cm) On systemic glucocorticoid (cortisone-like) medications • Those who meet criteria: pre-test probability for 1 or more prevalent vertebral fractures > 10% Schoushoe JT. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #1634. Association of VFA Positive Results with Use or Start of Fracture Prevention Medication After DXA Population Odds Ratio (95% CI) Osteopenia (n=298) 2.41 (1.30– 4.46) Osteopenia NOT on medication on DXA date (n=197) 4.26 (1.89 – 9.62) Schoushoe JT. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #1634. Do VFA-positive Patients Receive Appropriate Follow-up? • Definition of appropriate Follow-up to Positive VFA: Medication started or Reasons for NOT being on medication documented • Within 299 nested case-control cohort: 42 with a positive VFA with appropriate follow-up 4.7% of those who were NOT on medication after DXA/VFA had a positive VFA and inappropriate follow-up • Within entire sample: 4328*0.047 = 204 Proportion with a positive VFA who are followed up appropriately: 42/246 = 17.1% Schoushoe JT. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #1634. Influence of Identified Vertebral Fractures on Prescribing Behavior: Conclusions • VFA performance at the time of DXA influences use of fracture prevention medication • Positive VFA results associated with start of medication especially among those not on medication on DXA/VFA date • A significant proportion of those with a possible or definite vertebral fracture on VFA may not be receiving appropriate follow-up Schoushoe JT. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #1634. Systemic Sclerosis (SSc), Fibrosing Syndromes and Raynaud's—Clinical Aspects and Therapeutics Highlights of ACR Concurrent Abstract and Poster Sessions, Monday, November 7 Summarized by Drs. Clode Lessard & Janet Pope 184 List of Presentations in this Section Speaker Title Johnson SR Effect of Warfarin On Survival In SclerodermaAssociated and Idiopathic Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension. A Bayesian Approach to Evaluating Treatment In Uncommon Disease 2481 Schreiber BE Diffusion of Carbon Monoxide Predicts Survival in Systemic Sclerosis Patients with Pulmonary Hypertension and Interstitial Lung Disease 2482 Seibold JR Digital Ischemic Ulcers in Scleroderma Treated with Oral Treprostinil Diethanolamine: A Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Multicenter Study 2483 RodriguezReyna TS Microvascular Damage and Cardiac Fibrosis Detected by Heart MRI are a Hallmark of Systemic Sclerosis Heart Involvement 2484 Concurrent abstract and poster sessions: Systemic Sclerosis (SSc), Fibrosing Syndromes and Raynaud's—Clinical Aspects and Therapeutics. ACR 2011; Mon., Nov. 7. Abstract # 185 List of Presentations in this Section, cont'd Speaker / Primary author Title Domsic RT Development and Internal Validation of a Two-Year Mortality Risk Prediction Rule in Early Diffuse Systemic Sclerosis Patients 2485 Gelber AC Race and Mortality Risk in Scleroderma 2486 Chakravarty EF A Pilot Study of Abatacept for the Treatment of Patients with Diffuse Cutaneous Systemic Sclerosis 707 Meunier M Outcomes of Systemic Sclerosis Associated Polyarthritis Patients Treated by Biotherapies Tocilizumab or Abatacept: A EUSTAR Observational Study 1462 Concurrent abstract and poster sessions: Systemic Sclerosis (SSc), Fibrosing Syndromes and Raynaud's—Clinical Aspects and Therapeutics. ACR 2011; Mon., Nov. 7. Abstract # 186 List of Presentations in this Section, cont'd Speaker Title Jordan S Effects and Safety of Rituximab in Systemic Sclerosis: An Analysis From the European Scleroderma Trial and Research Group 702 Chung L Effect of the ETA Selective Endothelin Receptor Antagonist Ambrisentan on Digital Ulcers in Patients with Systemic Sclerosis: Results of a Prospective Pilot Study 668 Concurrent abstract and poster sessions: Systemic Sclerosis (SSc), Fibrosing Syndromes and Raynaud's—Clinical Aspects and Therapeutics. ACR 2011; Mon., Nov. 7. Abstract # 187 Should Scleroderma With Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension Be Treated with Warfarin? • Objective: To determine if warfarin use could increase survival by 6 months • Subjects: 275 patients identified by chart review from Toronto Scleroderma and Pulmonary Hypertension Programs • Conclusion: Warfarin did not significantly increase survival • Limitations: Low incidence of disease / warfarin use erratic / INR unknown / complicated and hypothetic statistical analysis Johnson S. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #2483. Predictors of Survival in Scleroderma With Pulmonary Hypertension Predictors from univariate analysis p value Functional class 0.007 DLCO % predicted 0.03 FVC/DLCO 0.006 KCO % predicted < 0.0005 Predictors from Multivariate Cox Analysis p value KCO % predicted Schreiber BE. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #2484. 0.017 Is Treprostinil Effective at Healing Ischemic Digital Ulcers in Scleroderma Patients? • Objective: To assess the effect of oral treprostinil in reducing “Net Ulcer Burden” in patients with systemic sclerosis (SSc) at 20 weeks • Design: RCT comparing oral treprostinil (serum levels were measured) to placebo Qualifying Digital Ulcers – Vascular in origin – Without bone infection or calcinosis – Distal to the proximal interphalangeal joint – Volar to the median of the finger (palm side) Seibold J. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #2483. Is Treprostinil Effective at Healing Ischemic Digital Ulcers in Scleroderma Patients? • Results: Overall negative study, but with some positive results No significant improvement in ulcer healing at 20 weeks compared to placebo No effect on time to healing of ulcers Good healing of ulcers in placebo group Medication more effective in ACA-negative patients Improvement in function, grip strength, patient impression of overall change and Raynaud and physician VAS Seibold J. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #2483. What Proportion of Scleroderma Patients Have Cardiac Fibrosis? • Mexican study of 62 scleroderma patients (47% diffuse/ 53% limited) without cardiovascular risk factors or history • Results: ON MRI, 58.6% of diffuse patients had cardiac involvement compared to 33% in limited form Prevalence of cardiac fibrosis Late enhancement on MRI Total Diffuse Limited p 28 (45%) 17 (58.6%) 11 (33.3%) 0.04 6.7% of the heart had fibrosis in diffuse Scl pts compared to 1.6% in limited patients LVEF was 66% in absence of fibrosis compared to 56% with fibrosis Basal area more involved than middle and apex Rodriguez-Rayna TS. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #2484. What Are the Mortality Predictors in Early Diffuse Scleroderma? • Design: Retrospective analysis of more than 150 variables • Subjects: 387 patients with < 2 years of evolution of diffuse scleroderma Mean age: 50 years, 75% women • Results: 2-year mortality rate: 20% Variables predicting mortality Age at first visit Rapid progression of skin involvement Severity of GI involvement Domsic RT. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #2485. Severity of muscle involvement Severity of cardiac involvement Anemia Is Race Related to Mortality Risk in Scleroderma? Relative • Design: Chart review from 1990Risk, to 2009 of Model Black compared to 95%CI scleroderma patients seen at the scleroderma White Patients clinic in Baltimore (n=2217) Unadjusted 1.3 1.1 – 1.5 Age, duration-adjusted 1.6 1.3 – 1.9 Age, duration, gender, subtypeadjusted 1.4 1.2 – 1.7 Age, duration, gender, subtype, Scl-70-adjusted 1.6 1.2 – 2.1 Age, duration, gender, subtype, centromere-adjusted 1.5 1.1 – 1.9 Gelber AC. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #2486. Abatacept for Diffuse Cutaneous Systemic Sclerosis: Pilot Study Abatacept (n=7) Placebo (n=3) p value -0.04 (0.2) 0.25 0.56 Absolute change in mRSS -8.6 (7.5) -2.3 (15.0) 0.059 % change in mRSS -33 (29.0) -6.2 (52.3) 0.31 -11.9 (18.1) -17.3 (23.2) 0.048 -8 (7.6) -2.7 (6.7) 0.023 Change in Patient Pain -11.4 (8.3) -15.0 (25.1) 0.18 Change in FVC 1.3 (8.5) 0.3 (8.5) 0.72 Change in DLCO 2.0 (6.3) - 7.4 (10.7) 0.84 # Adverse events 7 7 NA Change in HAQ-DI Change in Physician Global Change in Patient Global Chakravarty EF, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #707. Systemic-Sclerosis-Associated Polyarthritis Treated with Tocilizumab or Abatacept: EUSTAR Observational Study • Design: Observational study of 13 patients with SSc with arthritis Mean age 50, 10 years disease, 1/2 diffuse (dcSSc), 1/3 CCP+ • Results: Tocilizumab 8 mg/kg/month (n=9): DAS went from 5.0 to 2.2 Abatacept 10 mg/kg/month (n=4): DAS went from 4.4 to 1.8 No changes in mRSS or HAQ Meunier M, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1462. Effects and Safety of Rituximab in Systemic Sclerosis (EUSTAR) • Design: Retrospective EUSTAR cohort • Subjects: 72 SSc patients • 52 dcSSc / 19 lcSSc Mean 6 years disease duration (3-10 yrs) Treated with 2 X 1000 mg rituximab 2 weeks apart 28 / 72 were on other DMARDs (50% MTX) Results: MRSS (N=47) went from 18.2 to 14.6 (p<0.0002) – Among dcSSc with high skin scores (N=26), MRSS went from 26.6 to 21 (p<0.0001) Activity score improved No effect on PFTs, HRCT Among those with arthritis (n-=8), DAS decreased from 4.8 to 3.7 Among those with myositis, CK decreased Jordan S, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #702. Ambrisentan for Digital Ulcers in Patients with Systemic Sclerosis: Pilot Study Mean # of Total DU per Patient NB: Not an RCT, no control group. Chung L, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #668. Complicated Raynaud's Phenomenon Highlights of an ACR Clinical Symposium, Sunday, November 6 Summarized by Dr. Philip Baer 199 List of Presentations in this Section Speaker Title Wigley F Complicated Raynaud’s Phenomenon Clinical Symposium Complicated Raynaud's Phenomenon. ACR 2011; Sun., Nov. 6. 200 What is needed to make a Diagnosis of Raynaud’s Phenomenon? • Ask the following questions: 1. Are your fingers unusually sensitive to cold? 2. Do your fingers change color when they are exposed to cold? 3. Do they turn white, blue or both? • Confirmed if positive response to all three questions • Excluded if response to 2 and 3 are negative Wigley F. Clinical Symposium "Complicated Raynaud’s Phenomenon". Presented at ACR 2011. Thermoregulatory Vessels Wigley F. Clinical Symposium "Complicated Raynaud’s Phenomenon". Presented at ACR 2011. Primary Raynaud’s Phenomenon Involves All Digits Symmetrically Wigley F. Clinical Symposium "Complicated Raynaud’s Phenomenon". Presented at ACR 2011. In Raynaud's, the Thumb is Less Often Involved But Not Spared Wigley F. Clinical Symposium "Complicated Raynaud’s Phenomenon". Presented at ACR 2011. In Raynaud's, Pallor Beyond the MCP Joints is Worrisome Wigley F. Clinical Symposium "Complicated Raynaud’s Phenomenon". Presented at ACR 2011. Treatment Considerations for Raynaud's Wigley F. Clinical Symposium "Complicated Raynaud’s Phenomenon". Presented at ACR 2011. Treatment Considerations for Raynaud's, Cont'd Wigley F. Clinical Symposium "Complicated Raynaud’s Phenomenon". Presented at ACR 2011. Treatment Considerations for Raynaud's: Prostacyclin Analogs • The Cochrane review of 7 clinical trials using prostacyclin analogs in RP secondary to scleroderma found similar results, with the analysis favoring drug with respect to attack frequency and severity, physician assessment of treatment, and improvement in digital lesions Pope J, et al. The Cochrane Library 2009. Cited by Wigley F. Clinical Symposium "Complicated Raynaud’s Phenomenon". Presented at ACR 2011. Treatment Algorithm for Vascular Disease Wigley F. Clinical Symposium "Complicated Raynaud’s Phenomenon". Presented at ACR 2011. Vasculitis Highlights of ACR Poster Sessions, November 7 & 8 Summarized by Drs. Robert Offer and Peter Panopalis 210 List of Presentations in this Section Primary author Title Schmidt J Statin Exposure and Risk of Giant Cell Arteritis: A Case Control Study 1512 Mariette X Results of a Randomized Controlled Study of Adalimumab for Steroid Sparing in Patients with Giant-Cell Arteritis 1508 Catanoso MG Tocilizumab: A Novel Therapy for Patients with Large-Vessel Vasculitis 1505 Unizony S Tocilizumab for the Treatment of Large Vessel Vasculitis (Giant Cell Arteritis, Takayasu Arteritis) and Polymyalgia Rheumatica: A Case Series 1507 Poster sessions. Vasculitis. ACR 2011; Nov. 7 & 8. Abstract # 211 List of Presentations in this Section Primary Author Title Pagnoux C Are Patients with ANCA-Associated Vasculitis Entered In Clinical Trials Representative of Patients Followed In Observational Cohorts? 2368 Tomasson G Optimal Definition for the Duration of Sustained Remission in ANCAAssociated Vasculitis 2369 Davids ML Mental Health As a Predictor of Disease Flare in Granulomatosis with Polyangiitis (Wegener's Granulomatosis) 2371 Poster sessions. Vasculitis. ACR 2011; Nov. 7 & 8. Abstract # 212 Effect of Statin Use on Risk of Giant Cell Arteritis • Objective: To examine a potential association between statin exposure and the risk of developing GCA • Method: Retrospective case-control study Review of medical records of all patients with biopsy-proven GCA (n=297) Randomly selected population-based controls matched for sex, age, and calendar year Investigators analyzed the association between statin exposure and the risk of GCA, with adjustment for cardiovascular risk factors Schmidt J, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1512. % with statin use at baseline Statins Reduce the Risk of Giant Cell Arteritis • Patients with GCA were less often users of statins compared to controls 100% 80% 60% 40% 20% 33.3% 14.1% 0% GCA Controls Schmidt J, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1512. • After adjustments for CV risk factors, statin use was associated with a lower risk of GCA • OR: 0.31 (95% CI 0.15 to 0.6, p = 0.0006) Mean change in prednisone dose No Steroid-sparing Effect for Adalimumab in Giant Cell Arteritis Mariette X, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1508. ACR 2011 Tocilizumab for Large Vessel Vasculitis: Case Series • Subjects: 6 patients with large vessel vasculitis 1 giant cell arteritis, 4 Takayasu arteritis and 1 thoracic aortitis w/ retroperitoneal fibrosis 2 treatment-naïve, 4 failed immunosuppressants ESR (mm/h) CRP (mg/dL) ITAS KERR Before TCZ After TCZ Before TCZ After TCZ Before TCZ After TCZ Before TCZ After TCZ PT 1 45 3 4.02 0.06 4 0 4 0 PT 2 67 2 0.99 0.05 3 0 4 0 PT 3 84 2 4.80 0.01 8 0 4 1 PT 4 95 4 5.42 0.07 3 0 4 2 PT 5 33 6 4.27 0.12 3 0 3 1 PT 6 69 12 0.88 0.04 2 0 4 0 Catanoso MG, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1505. Tocilizumab for Large Vessel Vasculitis: Case Series • Subjects: 7 patients with large vessel vasculitis 2 giant cell arteritis, 4 Takayasu arteritis and 1 polymyalgia rheumatica 6 subjects had failed at least one DMARD or infliximab in addition to prednisone • Results: Within 8 weeks, all subjects tapered prednisone dose to a mean of < 5 mg All patients have entered and maintained remission Unizony S, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1507. ACR 2011 Statistically Significant Differences Between Patients with ANCAAssociated Vasculitis in Observational Cohorts & Clinical Trials Observational Cohorts (n=423) Clinical Trials (n=220) P value Microscopic polyangiitis, n (%) 26 (6.1) 41 (18.6) <0.001 Age at diagnosis, years (± SD) 46.5 ± 17.3 56.6 ± 13.9 <0.001 Lung involvement, n (%) 275 (65.6) 169 (78.2) <0.001 CV involvement, n (%) 25 (6.0) 37 (17.5) <0.001 GI manifestations, n (%) 28 (6.7) 26 (12.3) 0.02 Renal involvement, n (%) 231 (53.7) 174 (80.9) <0.001 131.4 ± 142 196.0 ± 218 <0.001 Anti-MPO positive 58 (15.3) 51 (23.2) 0.01 BVAS 16.7 ± 7.5 22.4 ± 7.5 <0.001 Mean follow-up since diagnosis, months (± SD) 72.5 ± 61.7 61.6 ± 44.3 0.02 14 (3.3) 49 (22.3) <0.001 256 (60.5) 101 (45.9) 0.01 Variable Mean creatinine (µmol/l ± SD) Death Relapse Pagnoux C, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #2368. What is the Optimal Definition for Duration of Sustained Remission in ANCA-Associated Vasculitis? • Objective: To arrive at a definition for duration of sustained remission in AAV that best discriminates b/w more or less effective treatments • Method: Data drawn from the IMPROVE trial: AZA vs. MMF Tested periods from 1 month to 36 months and assessed risk ratio • Results: 6 months resulted in highest RR (1.6) Any interval between 4-13 months was able to discriminate between the 2 regimens Tomasson G, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #2369. Mental Health as a Predictor of Disease Flare in Wegener’s Granulomatosis • Objective: To determine if stress contributes to disease flare • Method: Assessed patients in WGET trial who had achieved remission (6 months) Assessed SF-36 scores (MCS, PCS) • Results: 5-point lower MCS score at the preceding visit was associated with a 19% increased likelihood of having a flare at the current visit • Conclusion: Mental health may be an important independent factor affecting the likelihood of future disease flares Davids ML, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #2371. Fibromyalgia and Soft Tissue Disorders Highlights of an ACR Concurrent Abstract Session, Monday, November 7 Summarized by Dr. Robert Offer 221 List of Presentations in this Session Speaker Title Ste-Marie PA Continued Opioid Use in Fibromyalgia Is Associated with Negative Health Related Outcomes 1605 Wolfe F An 11-Year Longitudinal Study of Pharmacologic Therapy in Fibromyalgia 1610 Concurrent abstract session. Fibromyalgia and Soft Tissue Disorders. ACR 2011; Mon., Nov. 7. Abstract # 222 Impact of Continued Opioid Use for Fibromyalgia • Objective: To examine the outcome in FM patients stratified according to opioid use in a longitudinal study • Subjects: 159 patients with FM in a prospective cohort • Variables assessed: Demographics and disease information Patient Global Impression of Change (PGIC) Employment and disability status FIQ, HAQ, PDI, Pain and Global VAS, depression & anxiety Ste-Marie PA, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #1605. Impact of Continued Opioid Use for Fibromyalgia ALL n=131 Opioid users n=43 Non-users n=88 p value Employed, n (%) 39 (30) 11 (26) 28 (32) NS Disability, n (%) 42 (32) 16 (37) 26 (30) NS PAIN Pain VAS ±SD 6.4 ± 2.3 6.9 ±2.2 6.2 ±2.4 NS MPQ ±SD 42 ± 15 46 ±15 40 ±15 0.03 Body Map ±SD 27 ± 10 28 ±9 26 ±11 NS FUNCTION FIQ ±SD 66 ± 18 72 ±15 63 ±18 0.005 PDI ±SD 37 ± 15 41 ±14 34 ±16 0.018 HAQ ±SD 1.14 ± 0.66 1.23 ±0.67 1.09 ±0.65 NS Patient global VAS ±SD 6.4 ± 2.4 7.1 ±2.3 6.1 ±2.4 0.025 AIMS anx ±SD 6.1 ± 1.9 6.4 ±1.7 6.0 ±2.0 NS AIMS dep ±SD 5.0 ± 1.6 5.2 ±1.4 4.9 ±1.7 NS Ste-Marie PA, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #1605. 11-year Longitudinal Study of Pharmacotherapy for Fibromyalgia: Analgesics N=2870, assessed q6mo Wolfe F, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #1610. 11-year Longitudinal Study of Pharmacotherapy for Fibromyalgia: Centrally Acting Agents N=2870, assessed q6mo Wolfe F, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #1610. 11-year Longitudinal Study of Pharmacotherapy for Fibromyalgia: Centrally Acting Agents N=2870, assessed q6mo Wolfe F, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Presentation #1610. Autoimmune Myopathies Highlights of Various ACR Sessions, November 6-9 Summarized by Dr. Yves Troyanov 228 List of Presentations in this Section Speaker / Primary Author Title ChristopherStine L Statin Myopathies: Emerging Concepts NA Fiorentino D Dermatomyositis Skin Disease: Novel Phenotypes in Diagnosis, Prognosis, and Therapy NA Nakashima R Clinical Features and Treatment of Dermatomyositis Patients with Anti-CADM-140 (melanoma differentiation-associated protein 5: MDA5) Antibody; Recommendation of Combined Immunosuppressive Therapy with Intensive Intravenous Cyclophosphamide 225 Various ACR 2011 Sessions; November 6-9. Abstract # 229 List of Presentations in this Section Speaker / Primary Author Title Ceribelli A Anti-MJ/NXP-2 Antibodies Are the Most Common Specificity in a Cohort of Adult Caucasian Patients with Dermatomyositis 231 Satoh M Transcription Intermediary Factor (TIF)-1β Is a New Dermatomyositis Autoantigen 228 AgudeloHernandez A Clinical Features and Survival in Anti-PL-7 Autoantibody Positive Myositis Patients From a Single Tertiary Care Center 229 Paik JJ Features of Acute Denervation in Scleroderma Myopathy 1463 Various ACR 2011 Sessions; November 6-9. Abstract # 230 Statin-induced Immune Myopathy • What is the clinical, serological and pathological phenotype of statin-induced immune myopathy? Adults over 50 years Exposure to atorvastatin Progressive CK elevation despite cessation of statin No Raynaud's, arthritis or ILD High CKs Necrosis on muscle biopsy Anti-HMGCR autoantibody on ELISA testing Anti-200-100 autoantibody on IPP testing Christopher-Stine L. Clinical Symposium " Emerging Concepts in the Inflammatory Myopathies ". Presented at ACR 2011. Anti-MDA5 Dermatomyositis: Specific Dermatologic Features • • • • Palmar papules Skin ulcerations (digital, Gottron's, elbows) Severe alopecia Thickened red plaques on lateral aspects of index fingers • Digital necrosis or ischemia • Gum and oral pain • Gum and oral ulcerations Fiorentino D. Clinical Symposium " Emerging Concepts in the Inflammatory Myopathies ". Presented at ACR 2011. Anti-MDA5 Dermatomyositis: Extracutaneous Features • • • • Mild muscle involvement (normal or low CKs) Arthritis Hand swelling Interstitial lung disease Non-UIP, NSIP and DAD pattern on hrCT Random distribution of peripheral and peribronchovascular consolidations and nonseptal linear or plate-like opacities Fiorentino D. Clinical Symposium " Emerging Concepts in the Inflammatory Myopathies ". Presented at ACR 2011. Anti-MDA5 Dermatomyositis: Laboratory Features • • • • • • • • • Evidence of macrophage activation High ferritin Cytopenias (lymphopenia under 900/mL) Hypertriglyceridemia High LDH High LFTs Negative ANA Anti-MDA5 on ELISA testing Anti-140 autoantibody on IPP testing Fiorentino D. Clinical Symposium " Emerging Concepts in the Inflammatory Myopathies ". Presented at ACR 2011. Anti-MDA5 Dermatomyositis: Immunosuppressants + High-dose Prednisone • Objective: To assess the efficacy of combined immunosuppressive therapy for anti-MDA5 dermatomyositis • Subjects: 24 anti-MDA5-positive patients and 23 anti-MDA5-negative patients • Method: Evaluation of the effect of intensive regimen high dose prednisone, oral cyclosporine and i.v. cyclophosphamide given to anti-MDA5 patients • Results: Survival rate of the intensive regimen group was higher than that of the others (57.1% vs. 28.6%) Nakashima R, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #225. Clinical Phenotype of Anti-MJ Dermatomyositis Anti-MJ (+) n = 10 Anti-MJ (-) n = 48 40% 23% Mean age, yrs (±SD) 37.6 (±12) 54.6 (±14.8) DM/PM/overlap 80/ 20/ 0 % 40/ 48/ 3 % DM 0.03 Heliotrope rash 60% 19% 0.01 Calcinosis 30% 6% 0.06 Heart involvement 0% 27% Interstitial lung disease 0% 33% Elevated CPK at last visit 0% 25% Male Ceribelli A, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #231. p value 0.05 Clinical Phenotype of Anti-TIF-1β Dermatomyositis • 4 patients identified from sera of 2200 patients 3 patients with dermatomyositis, 1 with undifferentiated connective tissue disease • Characteristics: Mild CK elevation and myopathy – 654, 341*, 314 and 2414* Mild DM rashes – G, no rash, S, G + H + S No ILD Positive ANA Anti-120 autoantibody on IPP testing Satoh M, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #228. Anti-PL7 Myositis: Key Clinical Features • Predominantly pulmonary presentations • Pulmonary hypertension is a common complication • Survival is severely compromised Agudelo-Hernandez A, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #229. Scleroderma Myopathy: Key Features • 29 patients Mean CK = 2078 (SD 3544) EMGs (N-M-I) = 4% - 38.4% - 57.6% MRI = edema in 94.4% Autoantibodies: – ACA (18.5%) – TOPO-1 (3.8%) – RNA-Polymerase III (15.3%) – U1-RNP (25.9%) Paik JJ, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1463. Scleroderma Myopathy: Muscle Biopsy Feature Inflammation only Necrosis only Result 0 8 (27.6%) Inflammation and necrosis 14 (28.2%) Esterase positivity (marker of acute denervation) 14 (48.2%) Presence of fibrosis with inflammation and/or necrosis 11 (37.9%) Paik JJ, et al. Presented at ACR 2011; Poster #1463.