Abstract
Introduction
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is increasingly used in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) to determine residual inflammation after treatment and as a predictor of structural damage progression. Establishing an optimal threshold of inflammatory activity that predicts lower risk of structural damage progression may inform treatment decisions. This post hoc analysis investigated whether patients with RA at low risk of structural damage progression can be identified based on MRI inflammation thresholds.
Methods
Hand and wrist MRI was performed at baseline, and at months 6 and 12 in a phase 3b, randomized, active-controlled, double-blind trial of abatacept in early RA (AVERT). Pathologies were scored using the OMERACT RA MRI Score. Data were stratified into two risk subgroups (less and more severe inflammation) for structural damage progression (erosion change > 0.5) based on baseline inflammation. In this post hoc analysis, log odds ratios of probability of progression {adjusted for baseline Disease Activity Score in 28 joints [C-reactive protein; DAS28 (CRP)]} were compared between subgroups to test the performance of inflammation thresholds.
Results
There were 351 randomized and treated patients with baseline MRIs, of whom 276 (78.6%) and 235 (67.0%) had MRIs available at months 6 and 12, respectively. The DAS28 (CRP)-adjusted probabilities of progression from baseline to month 12 based on scores at baseline, and from months 6 to 12 based on month 6 scores, were significantly lower among patients with less inflammation (P < 0.0001–0.0459), independent of clinical disease activity. Predefined thresholds of synovitis ≤ 3 (total score 21), osteitis ≤ 3 (total score 69) and total inflammation score (osteitis double-weighted) ≤ 9 were associated with a lower likelihood of structural damage progression in unadjusted analyses.
Conclusion
Levels of MRI-determined inflammatory activity below defined thresholds were independently associated with a lower risk of structural damage progression in early RA, providing a potential trial endpoint for levels of inflammation not associated with progression.
Trial Registration
ClinicalTrials.gov identifier, NCT01142726.
Funding
Bristol-Myers Squibb.
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Introduction
The concept of treat-to-target is now well established in the management of rheumatoid arthritis (RA), with clinical targets aimed at low disease activity or remission [1]. Modern imaging, including magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and ultrasonography, is increasingly used to accurately determine residual inflammation after treatment, as imaging-detected inflammation can predict structural damage progression [2,3,4,5,6]. However, there is little information on how low inflammatory activity must be on imaging in order to be confident that progression will not occur [5]. Additionally, treating physicians face a challenge when determining to what extent inflammation can be managed with symptomatic treatments alone or when more potent agents, such as biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs), are required.
A previous study suggested levels of synovitis, osteitis and a combined total inflammation score correlated with the risk of structural damage progression independent of clinical disease activity [7]. Validation of these levels would provide physicians with clinically relevant, imaging-detected inflammation targets. Establishing a threshold of inflammatory activity that predicts a lower risk of structural damage progression would help to avoid unnecessary initiation, premature tapering or other changes to treatment, as well as inform the physician on whether a review of treatment was needed. The aim of this post hoc analysis was to examine the outcomes of patients with early RA participating in a large clinical trial, based on their degree of MRI-determined synovitis, osteitis and combined total inflammatory activity, and to validate the aforementioned approach as a predictive trial outcome for non-progression.
Methods
Study Design and Participants
Assessing Very Early Rheumatoid arthritis Treatment (AVERT) was a phase 3b, randomized, active-controlled, 24-month trial in patients with early RA (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT01142726) [8]. The trial included a 12-month, double-blind treatment period in which patients received abatacept plus methotrexate (MTX), abatacept monotherapy or MTX alone (supplementary Fig. 1). Subcutaneous abatacept was administered at 125 mg/week. MTX was titrated to 15–20 mg/week within 6–8 weeks. The study design and results have been described previously [8, 9]. The AVERT study protocol was approved by the Institutional Review Board or Independent Ethics Committee at each site. All patients provided written informed consent and the study was performed in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki.
Contrast-enhanced 1.5-T MRIs of the clinically most active hand and wrist were performed [9]. Inflammation (synovitis and osteitis) and erosions were scored at baseline, and at months 6 and 12 by two independent central radiologists (Charles Peterfy and Yan Chen of Spire Sciences) blinded to treatment arm and chronological order, using the Outcome Measures in Rheumatology Clinical Trials (OMERACT) RA MRI Score (RAMRIS) method [10]. The scores of the two readers were averaged and the top 5% of discrepancies were adjudicated by consensus review [9].
MRI Inflammation Thresholds Analysis and Structural Damage Progression
MRI data were pooled from all three treatment arms for this post hoc analysis. Patients were stratified into two risk subgroups (less and more severe inflammation) based on MRI inflammation scores at the start of the observation period. The thresholds for less severe inflammation (based on preliminary reported levels) were: ≤ 3 for synovitis (total score 21), ≤ 3 for osteitis (total score 69) and ≤ 9 when combined. For combined total inflammation scores, osteitis was double-weighted due to its greater ability in multivariate analysis to predict structural damage progression and its greater effect on subsequent erosion development compared with synovitis, as assessed by radiography and MRI [7, 11]. Structural damage progression was defined as erosion change from baseline > 0.5 (OMERACT-RAMRIS erosion score scale for each bone: 0–10; range of scores: 0–230) [12] and greater than the smallest detectable change (SDC) (SDC value was 2.29) [9]. In order to provide a comprehensive analysis, structural damage progression was analyzed using MRI inflammation scores at various time points: 0–12 months by MRI scores at baseline, and 6–12 months by MRI scores at month 6.
Statistical Analyses
Risks of progression (erosion change from baseline > 0.5 and > SDC) were compared between subgroups and treatment groups using baseline Disease Activity Score in 28 joints [C-reactive protein; DAS28 (CRP)]-adjusted logistic models. Odds ratios and related P values were reported.
The linear relationship between unadjusted predicted probability of progression and erosion score (> 0.5) at baseline was explored (‘as-observed’ analysis).
Results
Patient Disposition and Baseline Demographic Data
A total of 351 patients with early RA were randomized, treated and had MRI data at baseline [9]. Of these patients, 276 (78.6%) and 235 (67.0%) also had MRI data available at month 6 and month 12, respectively. Baseline demographic data and clinical characteristics for the overall trial population [8] and MRI population [9] have been reported previously. Briefly, patients were anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide-2 positive, had a mean (SD) age of 47.0 (12.6) years and symptom duration of 0.56 (0.50) years, with 77.8% being female [8]. Patients had highly active disease [mean (SD) tender joint count of 13.6 (7.7) and swollen joint count of 11.1 (7.1)] with indicators of poor prognosis (rheumatoid factor positivity: 95.2%; mean CRP: 17.5 mg/L).
MRI Inflammation Thresholds and Structural Damage Progression
For the overall population, when adjusted for baseline DAS28 (CRP), the risks of structural damage progression (defined as > 0.5 or > SDC) at follow-up was significantly lower in the subgroup with less versus more severe inflammation at baseline for all comparisons (P value range = < 0.001–0.0459) (Fig. 1; supplementary Fig. 2). Only total inflammation score was not significantly associated with progression greater than the SDC between month 6 and month 12, where rates were very low (based on month 6 scores, P = 0.1284). In by-treatment analyses [also adjusted for baseline DAS28 (CRP)], patients with less severe inflammation at baseline showed significantly less progression from 0 to 12 months than patients with more severe inflammation in most comparisons across all treatment groups (supplementary Tables 1 and 2). The above observations were similar when data were not adjusted for clinical activity, as determined by DAS28 (CRP) (supplementary Tables 3 and 4).
MRI Inflammation Threshold Analysis
The unadjusted probability of progression (defined as > 0.5) from baseline to month 12 was lower among patients with less versus more severe inflammation at baseline (Fig. 2a). The unadjusted probability of progression from month 6 to month 12 was lower among patients with less versus more severe inflammation at month 6 (Fig. 2b). Similar trends were seen for the unadjusted log odds progression analysis (supplementary Fig. 3).
Discussion
This analysis established that lower levels of MRI inflammation below the predefined thresholds [≤ 3 for synovitis, ≤ 3 for osteitis and ≤ 9 (osteitis double-weighted) when combined into a total inflammation score] were associated with a very low risk of MRI-detected, baseline DAS28 (CRP)-adjusted structural damage progression.
MRI is increasingly being used as an outcome measure in RA clinical trials, usually in patients with at least moderate disease activity. Moller-Bisgaard et al. recently reported a randomized clinical trial (IMAGINE-RA) targeting the absence of MRI osteitis versus a clinical treat-to-target approach in patients with RA in clinical remission; no improvement of remission or radiographic progression rates versus the conventional strategy were observed [13]. However, the IMAGINE-RA trial contrasts with the current study with regard to trial design, baseline level of disease and patient populations. For example, in the current study, baseline mean DAS28-CRP score [8] ranged from 5.3 to 5.5 and osteitis scores ranged from 2.5 to 5.1, whereas in IMAGINE-RA, baseline median DAS28-CRP and MRI osteitis scores were 1.9/2.0 and 2.0/2.0 (for both arms, respectively) [13]. Furthermore, the IMAGINE-RA study targeted absence of osteitis, whereas the present study investigates a combined osteitis and synovitis target. Consequently, future trials with treat-to-target endpoints could benefit from including combined MRI thresholds as a primary study outcome measure for joint inflammation, thereby enabling the identification of individuals with a significant burden of inflammatory disease. However, very little is currently known about what level of inflammation may be deemed acceptable (i.e., suggesting that the risk of subsequent damage is low). Subsequently, there will be a need to translate these findings into a readily usable score for routine clinical use. Inflammation score assessments, such as those presented here, may complement standard descriptive or clinical assessments and be used to assess treatment efficacy and to improve the efficacy of clinical studies. Treatment with an effective treat-to-target strategy has been shown to decrease MRI inflammation scores at 6 and 12 months, and has been associated with significant reductions in clinical disease activity and an absence of structural damage progression at 12 months [14].
The work reported here validates inflammatory thresholds defined in earlier research using golimumab trial data: data from the GO-BEFORE trial were used to develop the thresholds, while GO-FORWARD data were used for validation [7]. The current validation was achieved despite differences across the trial populations: patients in the GO-BEFORE trial were MTX-naïve (as in AVERT) [8, 15], whereas those in GO-FORWARD had an inadequate response to MTX [16]. Differences between the golimumab and AVERT trials also included the drug and treatment regimens [8, 15, 16], and patients in AVERT had early RA (persistent symptoms for ≤ 2 years) [8], whereas those in the golimumab trials had a longer-standing disease [15, 16].
In a GO-FORWARD validation analysis, 4.7% of patients with less severe total inflammation (i.e., no greater than the threshold of 9) versus 29.6% of patients with more severe total inflammation (i.e., greater than the threshold of 9) at month 6 had structural damage progression between months 6 and 12 (progression defined as > 0.5; odds ratio: 0.11) [7]. In the current analysis, these figures were 16.0% with less severe versus 32.5% with more severe total inflammation [baseline DAS28 (CRP)-adjusted odds ratio: 0.41]. Overall, progression rates were higher in the current study compared with the golimumab analyses, likely due to the selection of only patients who were seropositive and had highly active disease. To identify an appropriate cut-off for change in MRI, an erosion change of > 0.5, which has been described as a good discriminator of radiography-detected structural progression [12], and SDC, which has been reported to be less variable and enable smaller differences in disease progression to be detected [17], were used in this study. Despite these differences in overall rates of structural damage progression, our analysis supports previous evidence that a low MRI inflammation score is associated with an approximately 80% lower odds of structural damage progression.
In a GO-FORWARD validation analysis of the defined thresholds for synovitis and osteitis, respectively, 7.8% and 9.0% of patients with less severe inflammation (i.e., no greater than the thresholds of 3) at month 6 had structural damage progression by month 12 [7]. In the current analysis, these figures were 11.1% and 18.0%, respectively. The importance of MRI inflammation thresholds regarding subsequent radiographic progression has been documented in previous studies [6, 11, 12, 18, 19].
Strengths of the current analysis include the large trial size and the well-defined study population of MTX-naïve, anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide-positive patients with highly active, early RA. This research also validates earlier work in a distinct patient population treated with a different agent.
Limitations of this analysis, which should be considered when interpreting data, include that, as the study focused on patients with highly active early RA, the findings may not be generalizable to other populations. The work is also a post hoc analysis, with inherent limitations, such as the thresholds described here were not tested in the trial as a pre-specified outcome measure and the relationships between probability of progression and erosion score were from ‘as-observed’ analyses. Radiographic data were not available for this study; however, short-term changes in MRI-detected inflammation have been found to predict long-term changes on subsequent radiography in RA [20]. A limitation of defining low inflammatory thresholds is that older patients and those with osteoarthritis may have detectable inflammation by MRI [21]. However, patients would be very unlikely to have scores above the threshold used in this current study; for example, the median synovitis score reported was 0.5 with an inter-quartile range of 0–2, suggesting 75% of patients from in the general population had scores ≤ 2 [21].
Further research is needed to determine whether these and other thresholds, such as those including tenosynovitis, on MRI are applicable and optimal across different populations of patients with RA and during treatment with DMARDs with different mechanisms of action. Additionally, an investigation into whether achievement of low MRI-detected inflammation is associated with optimization of patient-reported outcomes would be very timely [21, 22] and could form the basis for a logical next study.
Conclusion
In summary, this post hoc analysis indicates that the achievement of target levels of inflammation in patients with early RA is associated with a very low risk of structural damage progression. These post hoc data provide further support for the value of measuring joint inflammation and damage using objective imaging techniques, and indicate that such measures may have the potential to be used as trial endpoints in certain patient populations and to contribute to personalized RA treatment in the future.
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Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank Dr Charles Peterfy and Dr Yan Chen of Spire Sciences for assessing the MRI data. P.E. and P.G.C. receive support from the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Leeds Biomedical Research Centre. The views expressed are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the National Health Service, the NIHR or the Department of Health. The authors also thank the participants of the study, as well as Yedid Elbez for his interpretation of the data.
Funding
Sponsorship for this study, the Rapid Service Fee and the open access fee were funded by Bristol-Myers Squibb, Princeton, NJ, USA. All authors had full access to all of the data in this study and take complete responsibility for the integrity of the data and accuracy of the data analysis.
Medical Writing and Editorial Assistance
Professional medical writing and editorial assistance was provided by Carolyn Tubby, PhD, and Fiona Boswell, PhD, at Caudex and was funded by Bristol-Myers Squibb.
Authorship
All named authors meet the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) criteria for authorship for this article, take responsibility for the integrity of the work as a whole, and have given their approval for this version to be published.
Authorship Contributions
Harris A. Ahmad., Joshua F. Baker and Mikkel Østergaard made substantial contributions to the conception or design of the work, analysis and interpretation of data. June Ye made substantial contributions to the analysis and interpretation of data. Paul Emery and Philip G Conaghan made substantial contributions to the conception or design of the work, acquisition of data, analysis and interpretation of data. All authors were responsible for drafting of the manuscript or revising it critically for important intellectual content and agree to be accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved.
Disclosures
Harris A. Ahmad is a shareholder and employee of Bristol-Myers Squibb. June Ye is a shareholder and employee of Bristol-Myers Squibb. Joshua F. Baker has nothing to disclose. Mikkel Østergaard has received grant/research support from AbbVie, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Janssen and Merck, and has participated in speakers’ bureaus for AbbVie, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Boehringer-Ingelheim, Celgene, Centocor, Eli Lilly, GSK, Hospira, Janssen, Merck, Mundipharma, Novartis, Novo Nordisk, Orion, Pfizer, Roche, Regeneron, Schering-Plough, Takeda, UCB and Wyeth. Paul Emery has received grant/research support from AbbVie, Merck, Pfizer and Roche, and is a consultant for AbbVie, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Lilly, Merck, Novartis, Pfizer, Roche, and Samsung Bioepis. Philip G. Conaghan is a consultant for AbbVie, Lilly, Novartis and Pfizer, and has participated in speakers’ bureaus for AbbVie, Bristol-Myers Squibb and Roche.
Compliance with Ethics Guidelines
The AVERT study protocol was approved by the Institutional Review Board or Independent Ethics Committee at each site. All patients provided written informed consent and the study was performed in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki.
Data Availability
All data generated or analyzed during this study are included in this published article and its supplementary information files.
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Ahmad, H.A., Baker, J.F., Østergaard, M. et al. Determining MRI Inflammation Targets When Considering a Rheumatoid Arthritis Treat-to-Target Strategy: Results of a Randomized, Placebo-Controlled Trial. Adv Ther 36, 2384–2393 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12325-019-01020-6
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12325-019-01020-6