Session: (1387–1416) RA – Diagnosis, Manifestations, and Outcomes Poster III
1392: Comparing Data on Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) Disease Status Using Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMS) RAID/RAPID-3/Self-Reported DAS28 in Remote Electronic Monitoring During the COVID-19 Pandemic with Face-To-Face Clinical Evaluation (DAS28-CRP) Performed Pre-Pandemic
Oxford University Hospital Reading, United Kingdom
Maria Mirza1, Kaiyang Song1, Madiha Ashraf2, Anushka Soni3, John Jackman3 and Raashid Luqmani1, 1Oxford University Hospital, Oxford, United Kingdom, 2Oxford Universtiy Hospital, Oxford, United Kingdom, 3Oxford University Hospital, Oxford, England, United Kingdom
Background/Purpose: During the COVID-19 pandemic, asynchronous consultations were introduced due to the significant backlog of patients with Rheumatoid arthritis awaiting clinical review. PROMs including Self-Reported Disease Activity Score-28 (SR-DAS28), Rheumatoid Arthritis Impact of Disease (RAID), Routine Assessment of Patient Index Data 3 (RAPID-3) and weighted RAPID-3 (RAPID-3 score divided by three) were assessed and compared with pre-pandemic clinician-assessed DAS28-CRP for the same patients. Furthermore, we evaluated whether moderate/high disease activity resulted in an appointment within three months, a measure of poor outcome.
Methods: We analysed the data pre-pandemic, from 01/01/2019-31/12/2020, and during pandemic from 01/11/2020-31/12/2021. During the pandemic, pre-clinic electronic surveys used for remote consultations were sent to patients. The data was passed into a secure database for calculation of PROMs. Statistical analysis comparing PROMs was performed using Pearson correlation coefficient.
Results: Out of 151 patients with RA, 72% reported moderate/high disease activity according to RAPID-3, whereas no patient was in remission (Figure 1). Notably, 16 out of 28 patients who were previously in remission according to pre-pandemic DAS28-CRP had moderate disease activity intra-pandemic. However, weighted RAPID-3 characterised 96.7% of patients as being in remission or having low disease activity (Figure 1). Disease activity according to RAID was more evenly distributed; 55% of the cohort exhibited moderate/high disease activity (Figure 1).
We showed a significant correlation between RAPID-3/weighted RAPID-3 and RAID (r=0.69, p< 0.001) (Figure 2); especially when RAPID-3 ≤15 (and weighted RAPID-3 ≤5) (r=0.84, p< 0.001). Self-Reported DAS28 did not correlate strongly with either RAID (r=0.22, p=0.0079) or RAPID-3 (r=0.21, p=0.013).
54% of patients with moderate/high disease activity according to RAID (n=83) and 49% according to RAPID-3 (n=110) required review within three months (Figure 3). Four out of five patients with moderate/high weighted RAPID-3 scores required a follow-up within three months (Figure 3).
Conclusion: RAID and RAPID-3 correlate particularly strongly at low disease activity. SR-DAS28 is not effective in indicating RA disease activity. RAPID-3 and weighted RAPID-3 skewed the cohort towards high disease activity and remission respectively. Conversely, RAID provides a more even distribution of patients across different disease activity statuses. Moderate to high weighted RAPID-3 scores were the best predictors for poor outcome (appointment within three months). Figure 1: Disease activity of patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis according to pre-pandemic DAS28-CRP and intra-pandemic PROMS (SR-DAS28, RAPID-3, Weighted RAPID-3 and RAID)
Figure 2: Correlation between RAPID-3 and RAID in patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis during the pandemic
Figure 3: Requirement for appointments within three months for patients with moderate/high Rheumatoid Arthritis disease activity during the pandemic Disclosures: M. Mirza, None; K. Song, None; M. Ashraf, None; A. Soni, UCB, Pfizer; J. Jackman, None; R. Luqmani, None.