Long-term effectiveness and safety of TNF-blocking agents in daily clinical practice: results from the Dutch Rheumatoid Arthritis Monitoring register
Publication year
2011Source
Rheumatology, 50, 1, (2011), pp. 196-203ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
Health Evidence
Rheumatology
IQ Healthcare
Former Organization
Epidemiology, Biostatistics & HTA
Journal title
Rheumatology
Volume
vol. 50
Issue
iss. 1
Page start
p. 196
Page end
p. 203
Subject
NCEBP 2: Evaluation of complex medical interventions; NCEBP 2: Evaluation of complex medical interventions N4i 4: Auto-immunity, transplantation and immunotherapy; NCEBP 2:Evaluation of complex medical interventions ONCOL 4:Quality of Care; NCEBP 6: Quality of nursing and allied health careAbstract
OBJECTIVES: Experience with anti-TNF agents for a decade can be used to research the safety and effectiveness of anti-TNF agents in the long term. The objective of this article is to describe drug survival, disease activity, daily functioning, quality of life and adverse events of TNF-blocking agents in daily clinical practice after 5 years of follow-up. METHODS: Data from the Dutch Rheumatoid Arthritis Monitoring (DREAM) register of 1560 RA patients were used for analyses (5-year follow-up, n=174). Drug survival and time to first serious infection or malignancy were analysed by Kaplan-Meier analysis. Several outcome measures at several follow-up moments were analysed per intention to treat and per protocol. RESULTS: The 5-year drug survival of the first anti-TNF was 45%, and 60% for total use of TNF-blocking agents. Baseline 28-joint DAS (DAS-28) was 5.1 (s.d. 1.3). After 5 years, the mean DAS-28 was 3.2 (s.d. 1.3) in all patients who had started with TNF-blocking agents and 2.9 (s.d. 1.1) in patients who were still on TNF-blocking agents. In the latter group, the HAQ score was 0.88 (s.d. 0.7) and the EuroQol five dimensions (EQ-5D) utility score was 0.7 (s.d. 0.2). Incidence rates of serious infections and malignancies were 2.9 and 0.6 per 100 patient-years, respectively. CONCLUSION: Five-year follow-up of RA patients treated with TNF-blocking agents showed a 60% drug survival accompanied by sustained low disease activity, normalized function and quality of life similar to that in the general population. The benefit to risk ratio for long-term TNF-blocking therapy remains favourable.
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- Academic publications [232036]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [89029]
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