医学
类风湿性关节炎
内科学
糖皮质激素
队列
入射(几何)
置信区间
危险系数
光学
物理
作者
Brian W. Coburn,Joshua F. Baker,Jesse Y. Hsu,Qufei Wu,Fenglong Xie,Jeffrey R. Curtis,Michael George
摘要
Objective Many guidelines recommend limiting glucocorticoids in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), but 40% of patients remain on glucocorticoids long term. We evaluated the cardiovascular risk of long‐term glucocorticoid prescription by studying patients on stable disease‐modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs). Methods Using two claims databases, we identified patients with RA on stable DMARD therapy for >180 days. Proportional hazards models with inverse‐probability weights and clustering to account for multiple observations were used to estimate the effect of glucocorticoid dose on composite cardiovascular outcomes (stroke or myocardial infarction [MI]). Results There were 135,583 patients in Medicare and 39,272 in Optum's de‐identified Clinformatics Data Mart (CDM) database. Medicare and CDM patients had an incidence of 1.3 and 0.8 composite cardiovascular outcomes per 100 person‐years, respectively. In the older, comorbid Medicare cohort, glucocorticoids were associated with a dose‐dependent increase in composite cardiovascular outcomes in adjusted models with predicted one‐year incidence of 1.4% (95% confidence interval [CI] 1.2%–1.6%) for ≤5 mg, 1.6% (95% CI 1.4%–1.9%) for >5 to 10 mg, and 1.8% (95% CI 1.2%–2.5%) for >10 mg versus 1.1% (95% CI 1.1%–1.2%) among patients not receiving glucocorticoids. There was no significant association among the CDM cohort. However, in the subgroup of younger patients with RA and higher cardiovascular risk, glucocorticoids were associated with a dose‐dependent increase in composite cardiovascular outcomes. Conclusion Among older patients with more comorbidities and younger patients with higher cardiovascular risk with RA on stable DMARD therapy, glucocorticoids were associated with a dose‐dependent increased risk of MI and stroke, even at doses ≤5 mg/day. By contrast, no association was noted among younger, healthier patients with RA. image
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