Treatment outcome in early diffuse cutaneous systemic sclerosis: the European Scleroderma Observational Study (ESOS)

Herrick, A. L. et al. (2017) Treatment outcome in early diffuse cutaneous systemic sclerosis: the European Scleroderma Observational Study (ESOS). Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, 76(7), pp. 1207-1218. (doi: 10.1136/annrheumdis-2016-210503) (PMID:28188239)

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Abstract

Objectives The rarity of early diffuse cutaneous systemic sclerosis (dcSSc) makes randomised controlled trials very difficult. We aimed to use an observational approach to compare effectiveness of currently used treatment approaches. Methods This was a prospective, observational cohort study of early dcSSc (within three years of onset of skin thickening). Clinicians selected one of four protocols for each patient: methotrexate, mycophenolate mofetil (MMF), cyclophosphamide or ‘no immunosuppressant’. Patients were assessed three-monthly for up to 24 months. The primary outcome was the change in modified Rodnan skin score (mRSS). Confounding by indication at baseline was accounted for using inverse probability of treatment (IPT) weights. As a secondary outcome, an IPT-weighted Cox model was used to test for differences in survival. Results Of 326 patients recruited from 50 centres, 65 were prescribed methotrexate, 118 MMF, 87 cyclophosphamide and 56 no immunosuppressant. 276 (84.7%) patients completed 12 and 234 (71.7%) 24 months follow-up (or reached last visit date). There were statistically significant reductions in mRSS at 12 months in all groups: −4.0 (−5.2 to −2.7) units for methotrexate, −4.1 (−5.3 to −2.9) for MMF, −3.3 (−4.9 to −1.7) for cyclophosphamide and −2.2 (−4.0 to −0.3) for no immunosuppressant (p value for between-group differences=0.346). There were no statistically significant differences in survival between protocols before (p=0.389) or after weighting (p=0.440), but survival was poorest in the no immunosuppressant group (84.0%) at 24 months. Conclusions These findings may support using immunosuppressants for early dcSSc but suggest that overall benefit is modest over 12 months and that better treatments are needed.

Item Type:Articles
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Madhok, Dr Rajan
Authors: Herrick, A. L., Pan, X., Peytrignet, S., Lunt, M., Hesselstrand, R., Mouthon, L., Silman, A., Brown, E., Czirják, L., Distler, J. H. W., Distler, O., Fligelstone, K., Gregory, W. J., Ochiel, R., Vonk, M., Ancuţa, C., Ong, V. H., Farge, D., Hudson, M., Matucci-Cerinic, M., Balbir-Gurman, A., Midtvedt, Ø., Jordan, A. C., Jobanputra, P., Stevens, W., Moinzadeh, P., Hall, F. C., Agard, C., Anderson, M. E., Diot, E., Madhok, R., Akil, M., Buch, M. H., Chung, L., Damjanov, N., Gunawardena, H., Lanyon, P., Ahmad, Y., Chakravarty, K., Jacobsen, S., MacGregor, A. J., McHugh, N., Müller-Ladner, U., Riemekasten, G., Becker, M., Roddy, J., Carreira, P. E., Fauchais, A. L., Hachulla, E., Hamilton, J., İnanç, M., McLaren, J. S., van Laar, J. M., Pathare, S., Proudman, S., Rudin, A., Sahhar, J., Coppere, B., Serratrice, C., Sheeran, T., Veale, D. J., Grange, C., Trad, G.-S., and Denton, C. P.
College/School:College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Infection & Immunity
Journal Name:Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases
Publisher:BMJ Publishing Group
ISSN:0003-4967
ISSN (Online):1468-2060
Published Online:17 February 2017
First Published:First published in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases 76(7):1207-1218
Publisher Policy:Reproduced under a Creative Commons License

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