Clinical and Radiological Outcomes of Four DAS ≤2.4 Targeted Treatment Strategies: Eight-Year Results from the BeSt Study

Summary

Treating to target is the mainstay of EULAR recommendations for the management of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), but is it associated with meaningful clinical outcomes? Eight-year results from the Clinical and Radiographic Outcomes of Four Different Treatment Strategies in Patients with Early Rheumatoid Arthritis study [BeST] suggest that the answer is yes.

  • Rheumatoid Arthritis Clinical Trials
  • Featured Meeting - Specialty page

Treating to target is the mainstay of EULAR recommendations for the management of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), but is it associated with meaningful clinical outcomes? Eight-year results from the Clinical and Radiographic Outcomes of Four Different Treatment Strategies in Patients with Early Rheumatoid Arthritis study [BeST] suggest that the answer is yes. Marianne van den Broek, MD, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, The Netherlands, reported that after 8 years of targeted treatment, radiological damage was still very low, and functional ability had been maintained in all groups. Remission percentages were stable at about 52%, and drug-free remission was achieved in 15% to 19% of subjects.

The objectives of the BeSt trial were to compare clinical and radiological outcomes after 8 years of targeted treatment with 4 treatment strategies in patients with recent onset RA. The study comprised 508 patients who had a mean age of 54 years; were mostly women; and had a mean DAS44 of 4.4, mean Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ) score of 1.4, and median Sharp-van der Heijde score (SHS) of 4. About two-thirds of the subjects were rheumatoid factor-positive; 62% were anticitrullinated protein antibody-positive. Participants were randomized to 1 of 4 treatment strategies: 1) sequential monotherapy, 2) step-up combination therapy, 3) initial combination with prednisone, and 4) initial combination with infliximab (Figure 1). The treatment target was DAS ≤2.4. Treatment was adjusted every 3 months, based on individual DAS using the following algorithm:

  • DAS >2.4: proceed to the next step in the treatment

  • DAS ≤2.4 for at least 6 months: taper to maintenance dose

  • DAS <1.6 for at least 6 months: stop antirheumatic treatment

Figure 1.

Treatment Strategies.

MTX=methotrexate; IFX=infliximab; HCQ=hydroxychloroquine; CSA=cyclosporine; SSA=sulfasalazine.Reproduced with permission from M. van den Broek, MD.

Functional ability, measured with the HAQ, was analyzed with a linear mixed model, with time, treatment, and time*treatment as independent variables. Radiographs of baseline and Years 1 through 8 were scored with the SHS, blinded for the patient's identity and in random order, to assess radiological damage progression.

After 8 years, 347 (68.3%) patients were still in follow-up. A DAS ≤2.4 was achieved in 79% of these subjects, and 52% were in remission (DAS <1.6). The differences between the treatment groups were not significant (Table 1). Among those who achieved remission, 18%, 19%, 17%, and 15% of the patients in Groups 1 through 4, respectively, were in drug-free remission, with a median (mean) duration of 45 (39) months. Six patients were lost to follow-up, and 12 patients achieved drug-free remission in Year 8, while 8 patients with prolonged drug-free remission dropped out of the study.

Table 1.

Eight-Year Results.

After initial differences in Years 1 and 2 between the 4 groups, annual radiological damage progression rates were low and similar between all groups, reflecting the efficacy of DAS-steered therapy. Median (mean) total damage progression after 8 years was 3 (11) points SHS (nonsignificant between groups). Patients who were in sustained drug-free remission had a mean SHS progression of 0.1 [median (IQR) 0 (0–0.03)] per person-year drug-free.

The initial improvement of function, which occurred earlier in Groups 3 and 4 than in Groups 1 and 2, was maintained without deterioration over 8 years in all groups. No differences were found for functional ability over time, with the exception of better functional ability in Group 4 compared with Group 2 (mean HAQ 0.57 and 0.71, respectively). Toxicity was comparable between the groups (Table 2).

Table 2.

Toxicity Over Eight Years.

View Summary