Low prevalence of work disability in early inflammatory arthritis (EIA) and early rheumatoid arthritis at enrollment into a multi-site registry: results from the catch cohort

被引:0
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作者
Lauren Mussen
Tristan Boyd
Vivian Bykerk
Faye de Leon
Lihua Li
Gilles Boire
Carol Hitchon
Boulos Haraoui
J. Carter Thorne
Janet Pope
机构
[1] St Joseph’s Health Care,Division of Rheumatology, Department of Medicine
[2] Western University,Department of Internal Medicine, Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry
[3] Western University,Division of Nephrology
[4] Brigham and Women’s Hospital,Arthritis Center
[5] McMaster University,Rheumatic Disease Unit
[6] Western University,undefined
[7] Université de Sherbrooke,undefined
[8] University of Manitoba,undefined
[9] Institut de Rhumatologie,undefined
[10] Southlake Regional Health Centre,undefined
来源
关键词
Rheumatoid arthritis; Early RA; Early inflammatory arthritis (EIA); Work disability;
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摘要
We determined the prevalence of work disability in early rheumatoid arthritis (ERA) and undifferentiated early inflammatory arthritis (EIA) patients at first enrollment into the Canadian Early Arthritis Cohort (CATCH) who met the 2010 ACR criteria versus those not meeting criteria, to determine the impact of meeting new criteria on work disability status. Data at first visit into the cohort were analyzed. Descriptive statistics and logistic regression analyses were performed to investigate the association of other variables in our database with work disability. 1,487 patients were enrolled in the CATCH study, a multi-site observational, prospective cohort of patients with EIA. 934 patients were excluded (505 based on missing criteria for ACR 2010 classification, as anti-CCP was absent, and 429 were not working for other reasons). Of the 553 patients included, 71 % were female with mean disease duration of 6.4 months. 524 (94.8 %) were employed while 29 (5.2 %) reported work disability at first visit. There were no differences between those meeting 2010 ACR criteria versus those who did not. Baseline characteristics associated with work disability were male gender, age, education, income, HAQ, and positive RF status. The mean HAQ score in work disabled patients was 1.4 versus 0.9 in those who were working (p < 0.001). Disease activity score (DAS28) was not associated with work disability (p = 0.069), nor was tender joint count, swollen joint count, anti-CCP, patient global assessment, or SF-12v2. In the regression model, work disability was associated with lower income levels (p = 0.01) and worse HAQ scores (OR 2.33; p = 0.001), but not significantly associated with male gender (p = 0.08), older age (>50 years; p = 0.3), lower education (p = 0.3) or RF positivity (p = 0.6). We found rates of work disability to be low at entry into this EIA cohort compared to previous studies. There may be potential for intervention in ERA to prevent the development of work disability.
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页码:457 / 465
页数:8
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