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LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND — Patients with rheumatoid arthritis who have a history of cigarette smoking are more likely to have a poor response to anti-tumor necrosis factor therapy than are those who have never smoked.
Recent studies have provided strong evidence that cigarette smoking is a risk factor in susceptibility to rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and more severe disease. Smokers with RA appear to have increased production of cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor, and autoantibodies such as rheumatoid factor. A recent study from the British Society for Rheumatology's biologics register found that patients who were current smokers had a low response rate to infliximab (Rheumatology [Oxford] 2006;45:1558–65).
“To see if smoking affects the response to therapy in our patients and to determine if there is a relationship between response and pack-year history, we collected demographic data and smoking histories for all patients at our hospital who were started on anti-TNF drugs since 2002,” reported Dr. Derek L. Mattey of Staffordshire Rheumatology Centre, University Hospital of North Staffordshire, Stoke-on-Trent, England.
A total of 154 patients whose mean age was 65 years were included. Infliximab was the agent used by 83 patients, etanercept by 55, and adalimumab by 16.
Two-thirds of the patients reported ever having smoked, but only 25% were still current smokers at the time they initiated treatment. The extent of previous smoking was quantified, with one pack-year being equivalent to 20 cigarettes per day for 1 year, and intensity of smoking stratified as never (0 pack-years), light (1–15 pack-years), moderate (16–30 pack-years), and heavy (more than 30 pack-years).
At baseline, smokers were more likely to be rheumatoid factor positive and have nodular disease, but smokers and nonsmokers did not differ in baseline Disease Activity Score (DAS) 28, Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ) scores, pain scores, or C-reactive protein level, Dr. Mattey said.
Response was defined according to the EULAR improvement criteria, based on 3-month DAS28.
At 3 months, there were significant differences between the groups, with patients whose smoking history exceeded 30 pack-years having an odds ratio of 7.4 for nonresponse compared with patients who had never smoked. The odds ratios for those in the light and moderate groups were 1.9 and 1.8, respectively.
Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that the association of pack-year history with nonresponse was independent of age, sex, disease duration, baseline DAS28, and HAQ scores.
LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND — Patients with rheumatoid arthritis who have a history of cigarette smoking are more likely to have a poor response to anti-tumor necrosis factor therapy than are those who have never smoked.
Recent studies have provided strong evidence that cigarette smoking is a risk factor in susceptibility to rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and more severe disease. Smokers with RA appear to have increased production of cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor, and autoantibodies such as rheumatoid factor. A recent study from the British Society for Rheumatology's biologics register found that patients who were current smokers had a low response rate to infliximab (Rheumatology [Oxford] 2006;45:1558–65).
“To see if smoking affects the response to therapy in our patients and to determine if there is a relationship between response and pack-year history, we collected demographic data and smoking histories for all patients at our hospital who were started on anti-TNF drugs since 2002,” reported Dr. Derek L. Mattey of Staffordshire Rheumatology Centre, University Hospital of North Staffordshire, Stoke-on-Trent, England.
A total of 154 patients whose mean age was 65 years were included. Infliximab was the agent used by 83 patients, etanercept by 55, and adalimumab by 16.
Two-thirds of the patients reported ever having smoked, but only 25% were still current smokers at the time they initiated treatment. The extent of previous smoking was quantified, with one pack-year being equivalent to 20 cigarettes per day for 1 year, and intensity of smoking stratified as never (0 pack-years), light (1–15 pack-years), moderate (16–30 pack-years), and heavy (more than 30 pack-years).
At baseline, smokers were more likely to be rheumatoid factor positive and have nodular disease, but smokers and nonsmokers did not differ in baseline Disease Activity Score (DAS) 28, Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ) scores, pain scores, or C-reactive protein level, Dr. Mattey said.
Response was defined according to the EULAR improvement criteria, based on 3-month DAS28.
At 3 months, there were significant differences between the groups, with patients whose smoking history exceeded 30 pack-years having an odds ratio of 7.4 for nonresponse compared with patients who had never smoked. The odds ratios for those in the light and moderate groups were 1.9 and 1.8, respectively.
Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that the association of pack-year history with nonresponse was independent of age, sex, disease duration, baseline DAS28, and HAQ scores.
LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND — Patients with rheumatoid arthritis who have a history of cigarette smoking are more likely to have a poor response to anti-tumor necrosis factor therapy than are those who have never smoked.
Recent studies have provided strong evidence that cigarette smoking is a risk factor in susceptibility to rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and more severe disease. Smokers with RA appear to have increased production of cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor, and autoantibodies such as rheumatoid factor. A recent study from the British Society for Rheumatology's biologics register found that patients who were current smokers had a low response rate to infliximab (Rheumatology [Oxford] 2006;45:1558–65).
“To see if smoking affects the response to therapy in our patients and to determine if there is a relationship between response and pack-year history, we collected demographic data and smoking histories for all patients at our hospital who were started on anti-TNF drugs since 2002,” reported Dr. Derek L. Mattey of Staffordshire Rheumatology Centre, University Hospital of North Staffordshire, Stoke-on-Trent, England.
A total of 154 patients whose mean age was 65 years were included. Infliximab was the agent used by 83 patients, etanercept by 55, and adalimumab by 16.
Two-thirds of the patients reported ever having smoked, but only 25% were still current smokers at the time they initiated treatment. The extent of previous smoking was quantified, with one pack-year being equivalent to 20 cigarettes per day for 1 year, and intensity of smoking stratified as never (0 pack-years), light (1–15 pack-years), moderate (16–30 pack-years), and heavy (more than 30 pack-years).
At baseline, smokers were more likely to be rheumatoid factor positive and have nodular disease, but smokers and nonsmokers did not differ in baseline Disease Activity Score (DAS) 28, Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ) scores, pain scores, or C-reactive protein level, Dr. Mattey said.
Response was defined according to the EULAR improvement criteria, based on 3-month DAS28.
At 3 months, there were significant differences between the groups, with patients whose smoking history exceeded 30 pack-years having an odds ratio of 7.4 for nonresponse compared with patients who had never smoked. The odds ratios for those in the light and moderate groups were 1.9 and 1.8, respectively.
Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that the association of pack-year history with nonresponse was independent of age, sex, disease duration, baseline DAS28, and HAQ scores.