Session: (1387–1416) RA – Diagnosis, Manifestations, and Outcomes Poster III
1408: In RA Patients Without Prevalent CVD, Incident CVD Is Only Associated with Traditional Risk Factors: A 20-year Follow up in the CARRÉ Cohort Study
Reinder Raadsen1, Rabia Agca2, Maarten Boers3, Vokko van Halm2, Mike Peters4, Yvo Smulders2, Joline Beulens2, Marieke Blom2, Coen Stehouwer5, Alexandre Voskuyl2, Willem Lems6 and Michael Nurmohamed7, 1Reade Rheumatology Center, Amsterdam, Netherlands, 2Amsterdam UMC, Amsterdam, Netherlands, 3Amsterdam UMC, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, Netherlands, 4Amsterdam UMC; UMC Utrecht, Amsterdam, Netherlands, 5MUmc, Amsterdam, Netherlands, 6Amsterdam University Medical Centers, Amsterdam, Netherlands, 7Amsterdam University Medical Center, Kortenhoef, Netherlands
Background/Purpose: We have documented that patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) are at increased risk to develop cardiovascular disease (CVD) compared to the general population, even after correction for traditional risk factors, a risk similar to that of patients with diabetes mellitus (DM). The objective of the current study was to extend our investigation to a follow up of more than 20 years, with a special focus on patients without prevalent CVD.
Methods: The CARRÉ study is an ongoing prospective cohort study on CV endpoints in 353 randomly selected patients with RA. Data was collected after three, ten, fifteen and twenty years of follow up. Results were compared to those of a reference cohort (n = 2484) enriched for type 2 DM. Primary focus was on patients without prevalent CVD at baseline. Hazard ratios for RA and DM patients compared to non-RA/-DM controls were calculated with cox proportional hazard models, and adjusted for baseline SCORE1 (a score that estimates 10-year risk of death due to CVD based on age, sex, smoking, systolic blood pressure and cholesterol levels).
Results: 238 RA patients, 117 DM patients and 1282 controls, all without prevalent CVD at baseline were included in primary analyses. The primary analysis of events in patients without prevalent CVD shows that after adjustment for SCORE1, no relevant 'RA-specific' risk is observed, whereas a 'DM-specific' risk is retained (Table 1, Figure 1). In contrast, analyses of all cases (as was done in prior reports of this cohort) confirms the presence of an 'RA-specific' risk of about 50% (Table 2).
Conclusion: This new analysis of our cohort, now with 20-year follow up, focuses on CVD risk in RA patients without prevalent CVD, and was facilitated by the use of the SCORE1. These patients have an increased risk that is mainly attributable to increased presence of traditional risk factors. After adjustment for these factors, an increased risk attributable to RA only was thus preferentially seen in the patients with prevalent CVD at baseline. As RA treatment has improved over the observation period, this data suggests that the 'RA-specific' effect of inflammation preferentially targets damaged vessels. We suggest that with modern (early) treatment of RA, most of the increased CVD risk is mediated through traditional risk factors. Figure 1A-B: Cumulative hazard curves for cardiovascular events. Right panel, hazard for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and diabetes mellitus (DM) patients adjusted for calculated SCORE1 results. Patients at risk shown are at the 5 and 15 year benchmarks.
Table 1: Incident CVD in RA patients and DM patients vs healthy controls without prevalent CVD * Both fatal and nonfatal events. Hazard ratios are shown with 95% confidence intervals. Results were adjusted for calculated SCORE1 results. RA = rheumatoid arthritis, DM = diabetes mellitus, CV = cardiovascular.
Table 2: Incident CVD in RA patients and DM patients vs healthy controls with prevalent CVD * Both fatal and nonfatal events. Hazard ratios are shown with 95% confidence intervals. Results were adjusted for calculated SCORE1 results. RA = rheumatoid arthritis, DM = diabetes mellitus, CV = cardiovascular. Disclosures: R. Raadsen, None; R. Agca, None; M. Boers, Novartis; V. van Halm, None; M. Peters, None; Y. Smulders, None; J. Beulens, None; M. Blom, None; C. Stehouwer, None; A. Voskuyl, None; W. Lems, None; M. Nurmohamed, None.