HLA DRB101 and DRB104 phenotyping does not predict the need for joint surgery in rheumatoid arthritis. A retrospective quantitative evaluation of 300 French patients

To determine if the presence of HLA-DR disease-associated epitopes predicts the need for total joint arthroplasty or joint fusion in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Tertiary-referral, monocenter study. Three hundred RA patients (1987 ACR criteria) were retrospectively evaluated; outcome measure was recou...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical and experimental rheumatology 2004-07, Vol.22 (4), p.462-464
Hauptverfasser: GOSSEC, L, BETTEMBOURG-BRAULT, I, PHAM, T, DOUGADOS, M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To determine if the presence of HLA-DR disease-associated epitopes predicts the need for total joint arthroplasty or joint fusion in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Tertiary-referral, monocenter study. Three hundred RA patients (1987 ACR criteria) were retrospectively evaluated; outcome measure was recourse to total joint arthroplasty, joint fusion or bone resection. HLA-DR1 and DR4 were considered as the disease-associated epitopes (subtypes were not available for analysis). Analysis was performed using the lifetable method (Kaplan-Meyer technique). Of the 300 patients included, 78% were women, mean age: 56+/-14 years, mean RA follow-up: 12+/-9 years. Phenotyping: 73% of patients carried one (52%) or two (21%) disease-associated epitopes. Surgery was performed on 24% of the patients during follow-up. The most frequent surgery was total hip arthroplasty (13% of patients). According to lifetable analysis, 13% of patients had surgery (total joint arthroplasty or joint fusion) after 10 years of follow-up, 34% after 20 years. years of follow-up, There was no statistically significant difference in recourse to surgery according to absence or presence (single or double-dose) of disease-associated epitopes. Similar results were observed if the event was the second surgical procedure on a given patient. This study failed to demonstrate a relation between HLA phenotyping and the severity of RA defined by the requirement for surgery.
ISSN:0392-856X
1593-098X