Basic trends and variability of rheumatoid arthritis evolution: long-term follow-up results

Objective. To evaluate basic trends and variability of the course of rheumatoid arthritis, to reveal parameters of long-term prognosis. Material and Methods. 238 pts with RA (30 male, 208 female) were followed for (M±o) I5,5±6,4 years. They were investigated with standard clinical and laboratory met...

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Main Author: D. E. Karateev
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: IMA PRESS LLC 2004-02-01
Series:Научно-практическая ревматология
Subjects:
Online Access:https://rsp.mediar-press.net/rsp/article/view/1228
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author D. E. Karateev
author_facet D. E. Karateev
author_sort D. E. Karateev
collection DOAJ
description Objective. To evaluate basic trends and variability of the course of rheumatoid arthritis, to reveal parameters of long-term prognosis. Material and Methods. 238 pts with RA (30 male, 208 female) were followed for (M±o) I5,5±6,4 years. They were investigated with standard clinical and laboratory methods. X-ray evaluation was done by Larsen method. Functional disability was investigated by Stanford Health Assessment Questionnaire. Results. At 2002 162 (68,1%) pts continue following up, 47 (19,7%) pts died, 29 (12,2%) patients were lost to follow-up. The activity of disease had a tendency to decrease, but X-ray changes and functional lesions developed. According to the dynamics of disease, 4 subgroups of pts were defined: 1st subgroup (16,3% of pts) with stable low activity and slow X-ray progression; 2nd subgroup (27,3%) with high initial activity and slow progression, 3rd subgroup (34%) with low or moderate activity and fast progression; 4th subgroup (22,5%) with persistent high activity of disease and fast X-ray progression. The subgroups differed significantly by severity of functional lesions, by frequency of secondary amyloidosis and by frequency of lethal outcomes. The main clinical signs of unfavorable course of disease were large joint involvement during first 2 years, the development of extraarticular changes during first 5 years and the development of joint erosions during first 2 years. Conclusion. Some simple clinical signs in the first years of disease (large joint involvement, the development of joint erosion and extraarticular lesions) allow to predict the course and long-term outcomes in the pts wit rheumatoid arthritis.
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spelling doaj.art-848a022b1e3d4434bd1381fd36aa38e22023-03-22T13:45:39ZrusIMA PRESS LLCНаучно-практическая ревматология1995-44841995-44922004-02-0142181410.14412/1995-4484-2004-13751168Basic trends and variability of rheumatoid arthritis evolution: long-term follow-up resultsD. E. KarateevObjective. To evaluate basic trends and variability of the course of rheumatoid arthritis, to reveal parameters of long-term prognosis. Material and Methods. 238 pts with RA (30 male, 208 female) were followed for (M±o) I5,5±6,4 years. They were investigated with standard clinical and laboratory methods. X-ray evaluation was done by Larsen method. Functional disability was investigated by Stanford Health Assessment Questionnaire. Results. At 2002 162 (68,1%) pts continue following up, 47 (19,7%) pts died, 29 (12,2%) patients were lost to follow-up. The activity of disease had a tendency to decrease, but X-ray changes and functional lesions developed. According to the dynamics of disease, 4 subgroups of pts were defined: 1st subgroup (16,3% of pts) with stable low activity and slow X-ray progression; 2nd subgroup (27,3%) with high initial activity and slow progression, 3rd subgroup (34%) with low or moderate activity and fast progression; 4th subgroup (22,5%) with persistent high activity of disease and fast X-ray progression. The subgroups differed significantly by severity of functional lesions, by frequency of secondary amyloidosis and by frequency of lethal outcomes. The main clinical signs of unfavorable course of disease were large joint involvement during first 2 years, the development of extraarticular changes during first 5 years and the development of joint erosions during first 2 years. Conclusion. Some simple clinical signs in the first years of disease (large joint involvement, the development of joint erosion and extraarticular lesions) allow to predict the course and long-term outcomes in the pts wit rheumatoid arthritis.https://rsp.mediar-press.net/rsp/article/view/1228rheumatoid arthritislong-term follow-upsubgroupscourse of disease
spellingShingle D. E. Karateev
Basic trends and variability of rheumatoid arthritis evolution: long-term follow-up results
Научно-практическая ревматология
rheumatoid arthritis
long-term follow-up
subgroups
course of disease
title Basic trends and variability of rheumatoid arthritis evolution: long-term follow-up results
title_full Basic trends and variability of rheumatoid arthritis evolution: long-term follow-up results
title_fullStr Basic trends and variability of rheumatoid arthritis evolution: long-term follow-up results
title_full_unstemmed Basic trends and variability of rheumatoid arthritis evolution: long-term follow-up results
title_short Basic trends and variability of rheumatoid arthritis evolution: long-term follow-up results
title_sort basic trends and variability of rheumatoid arthritis evolution long term follow up results
topic rheumatoid arthritis
long-term follow-up
subgroups
course of disease
url https://rsp.mediar-press.net/rsp/article/view/1228
work_keys_str_mv AT dekarateev basictrendsandvariabilityofrheumatoidarthritisevolutionlongtermfollowupresults