Rheumatoid Arthritis
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a symmetric, inflammatory, peripheral polyarthritis of unknown aetiology
Diagnosis
Inflammatory arthritis involving three or more joints
Positive RF and/or anti-CCP
Elevated ESR/CRP
Exclusion of other diseases (particularly psoriatic arthritis, acute viral, gout, calcium pyrophosphate, and lupus)
Duration > 6 weeks
Evaluation
History and exam
Arthritis typically MCP and PIP joints of the hands, wrists, 2nd to 5th MTP
Blood tests
RF (positive in 80% of patients with RA, 10% of normal people, and 30% of SLE)
Anti-CCP (specificity 95+%)
ESR and CRP
ANA
FBC, UEC, LFT Uric acid, Urinalysis
Consider infective studies if needed
Imaging
XRAY hands, wrists, and feet
CXR if considering DMARD
Management
Early recognition and diagnosis
Achieving the benefits of early intervention with DMARDs depends upon making the diagnosis of RA as early as possible
Persistent synovial inflammation is a proliferative and destructive process in joint tissues
Rheumatologist
Benefit from early and ongoing care
Early use of DMARDs
Started as soon as possible
Much of the damage occurs early in the illness
Tight control
The therapeutic target is remission or a state of minimal disease activity
If resistant to DMARD then consider a combo e.g. MTX + Sulfasalazine
Consider NSAIDs and / or oral and intraarticular glucocorticoids as an adjunct to DMARDs as bridging therapy to maintain control of disease activity
Non Pharmacological Treatment
Patient Education
Important and individualised
Psychosocial interventions
CBT
Physical activity and exercise
Aerobic and anaerobic
Resistance
Improves fatigue, pain, and psychological wellbeing
Exercise for RA - Exercise Is Medicine Factsheet
Pai and stiffness lead to patients not using the joints
Physical and occupational therapy
Physical therapy goals are
Pain relief
Reduction of inflammation
Preservation of joint
If arthritis is under good control
Can participate in variable resistance exercise programs
Moderate inflammation
Isometric contractions
Severe inflammation
May require resting splints rather than exercise
Proper nutrition and diet
RA associated with anorexia and poor dietary intake
Obese patients should be encouraged to lose weight to decrease stress on joints
Dietary intervention for inflammatory arthritis
Diets rich in fish oil or omega-3 has evidence
Mediterranean diets, high in vegetables and fruit
Pharmacological Therapy
Pre-treatment evaluation
FBC, UEC, LFT, ESR, CRP, Hep B, Hep C
Opth review if hydroxycholoquine
TB if biologics or JAK inhibitors
Pre-treatment interventions
CV risk assessment
Immunisation
Choice of therapy
Factors affecting drug choices
Level of disease activity (eg, mild versus moderate to severe)
Presence of comorbid conditions
Stage of therapy (eg, initial versus subsequent therapy in patients resistant to a given intervention)
Regulatory restrictions (eg, governmental or health insurance company coverage limitations)
Patient preferences (eg, route and frequency of drug administration, monitoring requirements, personal cost, fertility planning)
Presence of adverse prognostic signs
DMARD
Non-biologic including MTX, HCQ, SSZ, LEF
Biological
Target e.g. JAK inhibitors
Approach to drug therapy
NSAID or Glucocorticoid depending on the severity
Then start MTX
DMARDS take weeks to months to achieve optimal results
Clinical assessment of disease and related testing
Patient history on the degree of joint pain, duration of morning stiffness, the severity of fatigue
Extra-articular manifestations such as fever, weight loss, malaise, eyes, lungs, heart
Functional capacity, ADLs, work, hobbies
Exam
Detailed exam
Labs
ESR and CRP for disease severity and monitoring
Imaging
Plain XR hands
Wrists (one PA view)
Forefeet including MCP joints (at least one AP view)
DMARD Therapy
Usually Methotrexate
Single weekly dose orally
7.5 to 15mg once weekly for most patients e.g. 70yo weighing 55kg with moderately active disease an initial dose of 7.5mg once weekly whilst 30yo weighing 80kg with highly active disease would be started on 15mg once weekly
Lower dose if eGFR <60
Increase as needed and tolerated to control symptoms
Increase by 2.5mg every 4 weeks if needed
Anti-inflammatory Therapy
Rapidly control inflammation but do not provide adequate benefit for longer-term control
Chronic use leads to adverse effects, especially glucocorticoids
NSAIDs titrated up to maximum dose and continued for at least 2 weeks before switching agents, anti-inflammatory effect usually achieved within 10-14 days
2400-3200mg Ibuprofen, 1000mg of Napoxen, 15mg on Meloxicam
Side effects on UeC and GIT symptoms
If using glucocorticoids doses are 5 to 20mg of Prednisolone
Most patients can be controlled on 5 to 10mg daily whilst starting a DMARD
Taper as rapidly as possible with the goal of discontinuation
Other drugs
Max Paracetamol if helpful
References:
Early Diagnosis and Management of Rheumatoid Arthritis - RACGP
Rheumatoid Arthritis 2010 - RACGP
Exercise for RA - Exercise Is Medicine