Extended report
Responsiveness of the core set, response criteria, and utilities
in early rheumatoid arthritis
A C Verhoevena, M Boersb, S van der Lindena
a Department of
Rheumatology/Internal Medicine, University Hospital Maastricht, The
Netherlands, b Department of Clinical Epidemiology, VU
University Hospital, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Correspondence to: Professor M Boers, Department of Clinical Epidemiology VE9-78, VU University Hospital, PO Box 7057, 1007 MB Amsterdam, The Netherlands m.boers{at}azvu.nl
Accepted for publication 26 April 2000
OBJECTIVE
Validation
of responsiveness and discriminative power of the World Health
Organisation/International League of Associations for Rheumatology
(WHO/ILAR) core set, the American College of Rheumatology (ACR), and
European League for Rheumatology (EULAR) criteria for
improvement/response, and other single and combined measures (indices)
in a trial in patients with early rheumatoid arthritis (RA).
METHODS
Ranking of
measures by response (standardised response means and effect sizes) and
between-group discrimination (unpaired t
test and
2 values) at two time points in the
COBRA study. This study included 155 patients with early RA randomly
allocated to two treatment groups with distinct levels of expected
response: combined treatment, high response; sulfasalazine treatment,
moderate response.
RESULTS
At week 16, standardised response means of core set measures ranged between 0.8 and
3.5 for combined treatment and between 0.4 and 1.2 for
sulfasalazine treatment (95% confidence interval ±0.25).
Performance of patient oriented measures (for example, pain, global
assessment) was best when the questions were focused on the disease.
The most responsive single measure was the patient's assessment of
change in disease activity, at 3.5. Patient utility, a generic health
status measure, was moderately (rating scale) to poorly (standard
gamble) responsive. Response means of most indices (combined measures)
exceeded 2.0, the simple count of core set measures improved by 20%
was most responsive at 4.1. Discrimination performance yielded similar
but not identical results: best discrimination between treatment groups
was achieved by the EULAR response and ACR improvement criteria (at
20% and other percentage levels), the pooled index, and the disease
activity score (DAS), but also by the Health Assessment Questionnaire
(HAQ) and grip strength.
CONCLUSIONS
Responsiveness
and discrimination between levels of response are not identical
concepts, and need separate study. The WHO/ILAR core set comprises
responsive measures that discriminate well between different levels of
response in early RA. However, the performance of patient oriented
measures is highly dependent on their format. The excellent performance
of indices such as the ACR improvement and EULAR response criteria
confirms that they are the preferred primary end point in RA clinical trials.
© 2000 by Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases
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