Article Text
Abstract
Improvements in the control of inflammation in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) by conventional synthetic and biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs) have led to a substantial change in the clinical outcomes of patients during the last 30 years. Current treatment can lead to sustained remission in some patients raising questions about the optimal management strategies in this subgroup of patients. Today, tapering of DMARDs and even their discontinuation appears as an interesting concept for achieving a more tailored and dynamic treatment approach of RA, especially in patients, who achieved full disease control by DMARD treatment. In this review article, current developments of DMARD tapering are discussed. The article provides an overview of existing studies on this topic and addresses new strategies to reach drug-free remission. Furthermore, concepts for defining patients eligible for DMARD tapering are described and potential future strategies in using biomarkers in predicting the risk for disease relapse after initiation of DMARD tapering are addressed. These findings are finally considered in light of the vision to achieve cure as an ultimate goal in patients with RA achieving full control of inflammation.
- DMARDs (synthetic)
- Rheumatoid Arthritis
- Inflammation
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Introduction
The clinical picture of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) has changed dramatically during the past decades.1 Thirty years ago, inflammation in RA was often difficult to control with available agents, leading to significant joint damage, loss of joint function and frequently crippling in a large number of patients. Today, inflammation in RA can be controlled much more decisively and effectively because of the advent of new therapies, including biological agents as well as the application of the treat-to-target strategy based on a wide array of conventional synthetic and biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (csDMARDs and bDMARDs), used alone or in combination.2 As a result, patients can achieve less severe disease in terms of signs and symptoms and a proportion can achieve remission. Hence, RA has become a ‘controllable’ disease in a proportion of patients, where the disease is tightly monitored and antirheumatic drug therapy is continuously administered and adjusted on the basis of objective measures of disease activity.
RA is traditionally regarded as a life-long disease that cannot be cured and patients require life-long immune modulation to control the inflammatory process effectively and prevent damage. Such a concept of disease control, but not cure, is well established in other fields of medicine for conditions such as diabetes, hypertension, HIV infection and certain forms of cancer. Under these circumstances, control of disease is possible as long as medication is given. However, despite improvements in disease control, cure still appears out of reach. In the same way, the improvement in RA treatment may represent a similar situation as unprecedented levels of disease control are routinely achieved. Whether sustained control signifies cure or at least a new specific disease state from a pathogenic view is unknown unless there is willingness to reduce or even withdraw medication entirely. This development raises a major challenge concerning the management of patients with RA who experience stable disease remission over a period of 6 months or even longer. Benefits of being in remission have to be weighed against potential overtreatment, safety considerations and treatment costs. Such considerations of safety and cost-effectiveness are different in patients with long-standing remission as compared with patients who still have evidence of active disease. On the other hand, the indication for tapering and stopping of disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARD) needs to be rather strict and its procedures should be well-controlled in order to prevent under and/or laissez affair treatment in patients with residual inflammatory disease activity.
The conceptualisation of disease has changed
Remission in the treatment of RA occurs more frequently now than ever before. Registry data support the common clinical observation that patients with RA show much better responses than in previous years, especially in countries with easy access to an armamentarium of synthetic and biologic DMARDs. In the Norwegian-DMARD registry, for instance, remission rates doubled in the last decade: hence, about 40% of patients with RA in Norway achieve remission of RA defined as disease activity score (DAS)28 of <2.6.3 Other registries/observational studies come to similar conclusions.4 ,5 For example, in the ESPOIR cohort, 50% of the patients with early RA were in DAS28 remission 5 years after disease onset and 65% in low disease activity (LDA).
Of course, these improvements in overall outcomes in RA treatment by no means imply that our current treatment tools for inducing remission in patients with RA are already optimal, since a subset of patients is still resistant to treatments and approximately half of the patients fail to achieve a state of remission, especially if the more stringent remission criteria are applied. Also, LDA as defined by DAS28 scores allows substantial residual inflammation and may therefore not anymore be considered as an ideal treatment target and even remission based on DAS28 criteria often reflects only minimal disease activity rather than true remission. Nonetheless, the aforementioned changes towards an increasing number of patients with RA with excellent disease control suggest that managing patients with RA in sustained remission is an increasing issue and concepts need to be developed to guide optimal treatment strategies for this group of patients.
Improvements in the management of RA
The reasons for a growing population of patients with RA in remission can be attributed to several different factors, related in part to the more appropriate use of DMARDs, early treatment as well as the treat-to-target approach with tight control and appropriate adjustment of treatment.2 Thus, patients with RA are diagnosed earlier and treatment is initiated at an early stage, when RA has not progressed to severe joint damage associated with irreversible functional decline. Another important factor in the improvement of RA outcomes is the rapid expansion of our treatment armamentarium, particularly the introduction of bDMARDs that address different targets and allow more effective treatment of resistant disease manifestations. In addition to the utilisation of the new agents, the current treatment paradigms permit more appropriate use of synthetic DMARDs regarding dosing or combination of synthetic DMARDs and glucocorticoids.6 ,7 Finally, better monitoring of the disease state (‘tight control’) as well as the definition of commonly accepted treatment goals (‘remission’) have contributed to substantially improved outcomes.8 In the future, the availability of biosimilars with lower costs may also allow patients’ access to potent drugs at earlier time points in the course of disease and thereby prevent damage.
The concept of DMARD tapering
The question of de-escalation or even stopping DMARD therapy emerges when patients have reached long-standing remission. This question is of major importance for patients, physicians and payers for several reasons: (i) taking chronic medication for a symptom-free disease state requests the highest-level safety of therapy and the demonstration of continuous benefit from taking such medication. In the absence of clinical evidence of significant inflammation continuous, if not life-long, DMARD therapy in full dose may provide more harms than benefits in certain individuals. Therefore, patients as well as physicians have to see the advantages of continued drug therapy, which may be difficult to demonstrate, especially when weighing it against the risks of therapy. (ii) The costs of DMARDs, especially bDMARDs are high and healthcare resources are under growing economic pressure. Hence, potential overtreatment of patients with expensive drugs needs to be avoided. In this regard, de-escalation of drugs in remission patients could liberate resources in healthcare systems for applying potent—particularly, biologic DMARDs—much earlier in cases of severe disease. (iii) Finally and, most importantly, only de-escalation of therapy will allow distinction between mere suppression of inflammation by DMARDs from real cure of the disease.
Therefore, if we in the future want to investigate the possibility of curing RA and to develop treatment strategies to reach cure, we will need to consider structured DMARD tapering to address this concept.
Patients eligible for DMARD tapering
At present there is no standardised way to determine the patient for whom de-escalation of DMARD therapy is appropriate. Beyond demonstration of clinical remission by a standard measure, the ideal patient profile has yet to be defined. Nonetheless, clinical experience, data from de-escalation studies and results from registries suggest that patients with RA in sustained remission are the best target population to study drug-tapering regimens.9–12 In contrast, LDA, which allows substantial residual inflammatory disease activity should not anymore be considered as an indication for DMARD de-escalation. Remission can be defined by various clinical measures, but most commonly a DAS28-erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) score of <2.6 has been used as a treatment goal for remission.13 In early RA studies, the DAS44 remission definition (<1.6 units) has also been used. Notably, current DAS remission cut-offs ‘accept’ a certain level of residual clinical disease activity. Hence, not all the patients in DAS ‘remission’ show complete absence of clinical symptoms; as such, their condition may reflect a state of minimal disease activity rather than a ‘true’ clinical remission defined as complete absence of signs and symptoms of RA. Lower thresholds may better disentangle patients with a specific disease state where pathogenic pathways have been deeply altered or even erased from patients with only suppressed pathogenic pathways. American Colleague of Rheumatology (ACR)/ European League Against Rheumatism (EULAR) remission criteria have therefore been defined; these criteria consist of the same items as in DAS remission criteria, but have stricter cut-offs and are therefore considered as an important treatment target in patients with RA.14 Whether the utilisation of a stricter cut-off is necessary to define patient populations eligible for DMARD tapering remains open at the moment, as a recent randomised controlled trial (RCT) has shown no benefit to the use of ACR/EULAR remission criteria in this setting.15 Furthermore, virtually all information on treatment tapering currently available is based on using DAS remission or low disease activity as inclusion criteria, suggesting a need for more data on the impact of using stricter clinical or even imaging remission criteria in DMARD tapering.
Next to remission state per se, other factors appear to be important to consider when considering tapering of DMARDs (box 1). Thus, duration of remission is a decisive factor for starting de-escalation of treatment. While patients can come into remission at one time point, they can subsequently lose their remission status, even if continuing on DMARDs.16 ,17 In support of this notion, studies aiming to define RA flare have evidenced this instability in disease activity, also called ‘bad days’, during which remission is lost.18 Hence, remission needs to be stable and sustained over time, ideally over a period of at least 6 months and documented at three sequential visits prior to starting the DMARD taper. Furthermore, DMARD treatment itself needs to be stable and glucocorticoids withdrawn. An exception concerning the use of the glucocorticoids may be stable doses of low-dose glucocorticoids (≤5 mg prednisolone per day), which are sometimes included in the long-term DMARD therapy and which can be included into the tapering regimens. Finally, it should be mentioned that the possibility of tapering DMARDs appears applicable to patients receiving either conventional synthetic DMARDs or bDMARDs, given that the aforementioned conditions are fulfilled.
Key messages for the practice
Eligible patients
Disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (DMARD) tapering should be considered if patients (a) fulfil standardised clinical criteria for remission state (disease activity score (DAS)28 <2.6; DAS44 <1.6; simplified disease activity index (SDAI) <3.3; Clinical Disease Activity Index <2.8; American Colleague of Rheumatology (ACR)/European League Against Rheumatism (EULAR) remission), (b) show sustained remission for at least 6 months documented by appropriate disease activity instruments at three sequential visits, (c) use stable DMARD treatment with respect to type and dose of DMARDs over the last 6 months and (d) do not use glucocorticoids to maintain their remission state
Risk and predictors for relapse
Some rheumatoid arthritis patients can successfully taper or even stop DMARD treatment. Anticitrullinated autoantibody negativity and presence of ‘deep’ remission such as absence of ultrasound synovitis and/or normal serum markers of inflammation are associated with higher chances to achieve drug-free remission
Mode of DMARD tapering/withdrawal
Both direct DMARD withdrawal and dose tapering protocols were studied. Patients need to be informed about the mode and how to taper their DMARD. For practical reasons, gradual withdrawal with an initial dose tapering phase may be preferable over immediate withdrawal. This concept applies to both biological and synthetic DMARDs
Monitoring and relapse management
Particularly when starting DMARD tapering and/or withdrawal regular monitoring needs to be scheduled in order to early detect relapses. Patients need to be instructed about the risks of relapse as well as the way to manage them. Reintroduction of the former DMARD regimen has shown to recapture remission in virtually all patients relapsing
Tapering and stopping of DMARDs is now also included in the treatment guidelines of RA by major organisations. EULAR guidelines, for instance, recommend stopping glucocorticoids first, even those administered at low doses, before DMARD tapering is envisioned.19 Then, bDMARDs should be tapered and stopped before synthetic DMARDs are de-escalated. Although such a sequence appears reasonable from a clinical and economic perspective, no strategy trials have yet compared different modes of tapering DMARDs. The guidelines of the ACR also include the possibility of tapering DMARDs as part of the new treatment recommendations.20 The ACR guidelines, similar to the EULAR recommendations, note that sustained remission should be present before starting DMARD tapering; low disease activity status is not considered as being of sufficient quality to justify the withdrawal of DMARDs. ACR also highlight the role of a shared decision process that incorporates patients' values and preferences in the context of DMARD tapering.20
Knowledge on tapering DMARDs has increased over the past years and several studies have either included de-escalation in their protocols or were entirely dedicated to de-escalation of DMARD treatment (table 1). In principle, these studies represent either observational studies or post hoc analyses of data from RCTs or RCTs entirely dedicated to DMARD tapering. Most of these studies addressed the role of biological DMARD tapering, while only few studied tapering and withdrawal of conventional DMARDs. Exceptions are two studies conducted more than 20 years ago;21 ,22 these studies addressed the withdrawal of synthetic DMARDs and showed an increased risk for the recurrence of RA. In addition, a few studies that are more recent included tapering and withdrawal of conventional DMARDs, which are addressed below.
Evidence from prospective uncontrolled studies
Stopping tumour necrosis factor inhibitors was studied in two observational studies by Tanaka et al. Although the RRR study (Remission induction by Remicade in RA) included patients in DAS28-ESR remission as well as LDA over 6 months, the study helped to advance the concept that stopping bDMARD treatment can be feasible in some patients with RA.23 In fact, most (78%) of the patients were in DAS28-ESR remission when stopping infliximab treatment with or without minimal dose of glucocorticoids. Interestingly, 55% of the patients remained in the low disease activity/remission status for at least 1 year despite stopping tumour necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitor treatment.
Similar results were obtained in the HONOR study (Humira discontinuation without functional and radiographic damage progression following sustained Remission), where stopping adalimumab was compared with continuation of adalimumab.24 In this study, only patients in stable DAS28-ESR remission over 6 months without glucocorticoids were included. While more than 80% of those patients continuing TNF inhibitor remained in remission, still about half (48%) of the patients stopping adalimumab maintained their remission state over 1 year without glucocorticoids. In a very small number of patients (N=6), who relapsed and developed DAS28-ESR scores over 3.2, adalimumab was reintroduced reaching LDA in five and remission in two patients.
Three additional small studies also investigated the stopping of TNF inhibitor therapy in patients with RA. The Leeds group of Saleem et al discontinued TNF inhibitors in 47 patients in sustained DAS28-ESR remission over 6 months and found that disease relapses occurred more often in patients starting TNF inhibitors late in their disease course. In contrast, the majority of patients starting bDMARDs early in their course of disease remained in remission over 1 year.25 The second study by Brocq et al involved a very similar setting, removing TNF inhibitors in patients with stable DAS28-ESR remission over 6 months. These investigators reported a rather high relapse rate of 75% in their population; however, the sample size was rather small, with only 21 patients studied.26 van der Maas et al gradually tapered infliximab treatment in patients with RA in DAS28-ESR LDA over 6 months and were able to successfully taper treatment in 45% and stop it in 16% of the patients.27 However, it should be mentioned at this point that a state of mere LDA without remission would not be anymore considered to be an indication for tapering DMARDs.
Regarding non-TNF biologic DMARDs, Aguilar-Lozano et al showed that a substantial proportion (44%) of tocilizumab-treated patients with RA remained in remission after treatment was stopped.28 The authors included 45 patients in DAS28-ESR remission with no duration specified and followed them for 1 year. Relapses were high in the DREAM study (Drug free remission/low disease activity after cessation of tocilizumab (Actemra) monotherapy) performed by Nishimoto et al.29 Only 13% of the 187 patients with RA maintained LDA over 1 year if tocilizumab was stopped. The high relapse rate in this study may have resulted, however, from the fact that patients included in this study were in DAS28-ESR LDA rather than remission, had no specific duration of remission required and were not treated with concomitant methotrexate. Finally, van Herwaarden et al studied 22 patients on tocilizumab who reached DAS28-ESR LDA on standard dose of tocilizumab (8 mg/kg) demonstrating that more than half of the patients could successfully maintain their low disease activity state after reducing their dose to 4 mg/kg tocilizumab.30
These prospective uncontrolled studies have provided valuable evidence that de-escalation of DMARDs is feasible in a subset of patients with RA. However, for exclusion of bias also randomised controlled studies are needed to address this topic. In the following two sections, the evidence on de-escalation of DMARDs obtained in such studies is summarised.
Subanalyses of withdrawal of DMARDs in RCTs
Several studies on the effects of bDMARDs in RA analysed treatment withdrawal in the subset of patients reaching remission. These studies did not a priori include patients with RA in remission, but those with active disease with the primary aim to induce remission. Patients who achieved remission, which was not necessarily sustained remission, subsequently underwent de-escalation following an induction-maintenance treatment approach.
Quinn et al studied 20 early patients with RA in a randomised, controlled double-blind study (20TNF study; Twenty patients with tumor necrosis factor inhibitors therapy) and showed that treatment with methotrexate plus infliximab produced fast improvements in disease activity, physical function and MRI inflammation compared with methotrexate alone.31 Since most of the patients in the combination treatment arm reached remission (not specifically defined but most in DAS28-ESR remission) after 1 year, treatment with infliximab but not methotrexate was stopped and patients were observed for another year. In the majority of the patients, improvement was maintained for another year despite discontinuation of infliximab. Moreover, recent follow-up analyses of the study of Quinn et al have shown that this remission induction regimen followed by bDMARD tapering led to sustained benefits of function and quality of life over 8 years.32
Data for DMARD tapering are also available from the BeSt (Behandel-Strategieën), where four dynamic treatment strategies were compared for inducing remission in early patients with RA.33 ,34 In patients with sustained remission defined by a DAS44 score of <1.6 over 6 months, DMARDs were tapered and finally stopped, with bDMARDs first followed by csDMARDs. About half (48%) of the BeSt study patients reached remission of RA in the entire study population. Rates for complete drug-free remission were 21% in arm 1 (sequential monotherapy), 17% in arm 2 (step-up to combination therapy), 16% in arm 3 (initial combination therapy) and 27% in arm 4 (initial combination with methotrexate and infliximab). The majority (74%) of the patients relapsing regained remission when introducing the last therapeutic regimen. Moreover, the BeSt study also produced valuable insights about the consequences of DMARD tapering by demonstrating that reinitiation of the last DMARD regimen prior to tapering can restore remission in case of disease relapse. Also, data from this study demonstrated that the presence of anticitrullinated protein antibodies (ACPA) influenced the risk of disease relapse after drug tapering.
In the OPTIMA study (Optimal protocol for treatment initiation with methotrexate and adalimumab), patients with active RA were randomised to receive methotrexate or methotrexate plus adalimumab.35 Patients treated with combination therapy, who experienced low disease activity status (DAS28-C-reactive protein (CRP), no minimal duration required) were then randomised to stopping or continuing adalimumab; they were then followed over 1 year. Although significant differences were observed between the two groups in maintaining low disease activity status (stop: 81%; continuation: 91%) or remission status (stop: 66%; continuation: 86%), the majority of patients were able to maintain a state of low disease activity or even remission even after stopping the TNF inhibitor. On the other hand, 18% of OPTIMA study patients had radiographic progression, which may indicate that some patients had not achieved full disease control by using a DAS28-CRP LDA cut-off for entering de-escalation.
Adalimumab stop was also performed in the HIT HARD trial, in which patients with very early RA were treated with the combination of methotrexate and adalimumab versus methotrexate plus placebo for the first 6 months of therapy followed by an open period applying methotrexate only for subsequent 6 months. About half of the patients (48%) receiving the active combination achieved DAS28-ESR remission after the first 6 months. After another 6 months, when adalimumab had been withdrawn still 89% of the withdrawers maintained their remission status.36 Likewise, in the GUEPARD study (Guérir la polyarthrite rheumotoide debutante), initial treatment with methotrexate plus adalimumab was superior to adalimumab alone. Those patients who started on the combination and reached DAS28-ESR LDA discontinued adalimumab. Only about one-third of them remained in LDA, which may be based on the use of LDA as entry for discontinuing adalimumab and the fact that no minimal duration of LDA was required.37 Also, the IDEA study (Infliximab as induction therapy in early rheumatoid arthritis) followed the concept of remission induction followed by stopping TNF inhibitors, if remission is reached. Hence, patients having achieved sustained remission, defined as DAS44 score of <1.6 over 6 months, using combination treatment with methotrexate and infliximab had discontinuation of infliximab.38 In this study, remission was maintained in a somewhat lower proportion (25%) of the patients after withdrawing the TNF inhibitor; however, patient numbers withdrawing treatment (N=14) were small in this study.
Additional supportive data for treatment tapering in randomised settings come from the EMPIRE trial (Etanercept and methotrexate in patients to induce remission in early arthritis), which included patients with early arthritis although not necessarily early RA. Patients were randomised to receive methotrexate or methotrexate plus etanercept. After reaching sustained remission (TJC0/SJC0, no minimal duration required), etanercept was stopped successfully in a small number of the patients (N=9), who maintained their remission status as defined by no swollen or tender joint.39
Concerning non-anti-TNF biologic DMARDs, patients reaching remission with either abatacept monotherapy or a combination of abatacept with methotrexate discontinued abatacept treatment in the AVERT trial (A very early rehabilitation trial). While 61% of the patients reached remission (DAS28-CRP; no minimal duration required) with abatacept plus methotrexate, only 15% of the patients maintained remission for 12 months after discontinuing abatacept. The high relapse rate in this study may be attributed to the fact that methotrexate was concomitantly stopped and even more importantly that a sustained remission was not ensured before abatacept was stopped; hence, stopping of abatacept may have been initiated too early.40 These findings are in accordance with data from the ACT-RAY study (Actemra radiographic study), in which tocilizumab was discontinued after a rather short phase of remission (DAS28-ESR for <6 months). Only 14% of the patients stopping tocilizumab maintained remission over 1 year.41
RCTs on drug tapering/withdrawal in remission
Two classical RCTs in the 80s and 90s addressed the possibility of tapering conventional DMARDs in RA.21 ,22 ten Wolde et al21 stopped or continued csDMARDs in 285 patients with RA achieving ACR remission over a period of 6 months. Remission was maintained in 62% of the patients over 1 year. Ahern et al22 tapered or continued D-penicillamin in 38 patients with RA in remission (TJC0/SJC0 over 6 months). Only a minority (21%) of the patients remained in remission (no swelling) over a period of 6 months. More recently, several RCTs have addressed the possibility of tapering DMARDs in patients in sustained remission.
The RETRO study (Reducing therapy in rheumatoid arthritis patients in ongoing remission) is a randomised controlled study to compare treatment strategies in established patients with RA in sustained DAS28-ESR remission over three sequential visits over at least 6 months.15 Tapering and withdrawal of both synthetic and bDMARDs were investigated. In this study, patients were randomised to continue synthetic and bDMARDs, tapering them by 50% or stopping them after a 6-month tapering phase. This real-life study includes patients with RA, who had achieved remission independent of the type of DMARD regimen, including conventional synthetic as well as biologic DMARDs in monotreatment and combination treatment setting. In the RETRO study, 66.3% of the patients remained in remission over a period of 12 months and 33.7% relapsed. Relapse rates were low in the continuation arm (16%) and significantly higher in the tapering (38.9%) and stopping arms (52%). Still more than half of the patients were able to maintain their remission state despite the de-escalation of treatment. Relapse rates were not different between patients, who did fulfil ACR-EULAR remission criteria and those who did not fulfil them. Moreover, relapses could be successfully treated and remission could be reintroduced in all patients when the original DMARD regimen was restarted again. The authors concluded that tapering and even stopping of DMARDs is feasible in a subset of patients if long-term remission was achieved.
In the PRIZE study (Productivity and remission in a randomized controlled trial of etanercept vs, standard of care in early rheumatoid arthritis), the potential of methotrexate plus etanercept to achieve remission was addressed in early RA.42 In this study, more than 60% of the patients achieved remission. Those patients achieving remission (DAS28-ESR; no minimal duration required) were then randomised into three strategy arms, which involved tapering of etanercept, stopping it or stopping both methotrexate and etanercept. Remission rates after 1 year were 62%, 40% and 23%, respectively, showing that the level of reduction of treatment reduction was associated with the relapse rate in the patients. Although more than half of the patients maintained remission while tapering, withdrawal of etanercept was possible in less than half of the patients and complete withdrawal of DMARDs only in one-quarter of the patients.
In the STRASS study (Spacing of TNF-blocker injections in rheumatoid arthritis study), the possibility of DAS-driven spacing out the time intervals between TNF inhibitor injections was studied according to the treat-to-target paradigm.43 Fautrel et al included patients in sustained DAS28-ESR remission over 6 months. All patients were taking etanercept or adalimumab. One hundred and thirty-seven patients were randomised to either continuing full-dose TNF inhibitor or tapering it by spacing the injection interval. If remission was lost, the last dosing regimen was reintroduced. The study showed that 39% of the patients could stop the TNF inhibitor in the tapering arm while maintaining the remission status. Another 35% of patients could successfully taper but not stop the treatment, while the other patients had to resume full-dose treatment.
Furthermore, preliminary data from the ADMIRE study in which 31 patients in DAS28-ESR remission (>6 months) on methotrexate plus adalimumab were randomised to either continue or discontinue adalimumab. An 80% relapse rate upon discontinuation was noted, but the rate in the continuation group (50%) was also much higher than in other studies and clinical practice observations, suggesting that these patients may indeed not have been in stable remission.
Three RCTs using DAS28-ESR LDA (>6 months) as an inclusion criterion for treatment tapering were published. At present, however, LDA would not qualify for DMARD tapering anymore as substantial residual disease activity can be present. In the PRESERVE study (Study comparing in etanercept in combination with methotrexate in subjects with rheumatoid arthritis), patients receiving etanercept were randomised into stopping, tapering or continuing the agent on background methotrexate treatment. After stopping etanercept, 43% of the patients remained in low disease activity over 1 year.44 In the DOSERA trial (Down-titration and discontinuation strategies of tumor necrosis factor–blocking agents for rheumatoid arthritis),45 patients on methotrexate plus etanercept were randomised to either continue full-dose treatment or reduce to half the usual dose or stop etanercept. After 1 year, 52% of patients on full-dose and 44% of patients on half-dose etanercept, but only 13% of patients on etanercept stop maintained a low disease activity state. The authors concluded that discontinuation of the anti-TNF agents in this previously highly active patients population is generally not possible, but that dose reductions may be feasible in a meaningful subset of patients. In the DRESS trial (Dose Reduction strategy of subcutaneous TNF inhibitors in rheumatoid arthritis), 180 patients with RA who had achieved DAS28-ESR LDA (no minimal duration required) on methotrexate plus either adalimumab or etanercept were assigned 2:1 to a gradual taper of the bDMARDs by increasing the interval between injections versus continued unchanged treatment.46 After 18 months, the tapering strategy was shown to be non-inferior to continued treatment with respect to major flares (DAS28-ESR change >1.2, or DAS28-ESR increase of 0.6 and current DAS28-ESR ≥3.2), the primary outcome. The authors felt that these data strongly support the strategy of gradually widening the dosing interval of these two subcutaneous biologics in patients who are in stable low disease activity. Currently, another RCT (named POET (Pragmatic Multicenter Open-Label Randomized Controlled Trial of Stopping TNF-Inhibitors in Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients in Remission or Stable Low Disease Activity)) aiming for TNF inhibitor discontinuation is underway in the Netherlands. This study searches for predictors for treatment tapering in patients in sustained low disease activity status, who taper their TNF inhibitor. So far, only preliminary data have been published.47
Predictors of flares
To improve the implementation of DMARD tapering in real-life, it will be critical to define predictors for disease relapses. All studies on DMARD tapering so far have shown that tapering is feasible in a subset of patients in sustained remission. Hence, decision-making and appropriate information about the risk for flare will be facilitated when clinical predictors or biomarkers, which determine the likelihood to relapse or remain in remission, will be available. In principle, clinical, imaging and serum biomarker can be envisioned for predicting relapse risk and which are also feasible in their application.
Specific clinical features have been associated with the risk for relapse. In the RRR study and the HONOR study, cut-off points for a successful discontinuation of TNF inhibitors were a baseline DAS28 value of 2.22 and 1.98, respectively, suggesting that ‘deep’ remission may be required to keep the biological-free remission and that residual inflammation in patients in DAS28 remission could be associated with a higher likelihood to flare.23 ,24 Other studies such as RETRO have investigated the influence of baseline disease activity on relapse rates.15 Thus, RETRO tested whether patients fulfilling ACR-EULAR remission criteria at baseline had a lower risk of relapse than those not fulfilling them. However, no difference was found suggesting that ACR-EULAR remission is not necessarily required to start tapering DMARDs. On the other hand also ACR-EULAR remission allows some residual disease activity to be present.
In the HONOR study, another baseline factor affecting adalimumab-free remission was disease duration, indicating that patients with early RA have better chance to stop TNF inhibitors. Preliminary analyses in the POET study and earlier data from van der Woude et al also suggest that longer disease duration is associated with higher relapse risk,47 ,48 while other studies did not find such association.15 The reasons for these discrepancies in the use of clinical parameters in relapse prediction are not yet fully understood, but may reflect the different patient populations in the studies and challenges in the discrimination properties of disease activity instruments at the very low range. For instance, high-level sustainability of remission may compensate for overall disease duration. In accordance, observations from the CORRONA registry suggest that rapid response to DMARDs is associated with better maintenance of remission when the agents are tapered later on.49
The concept that residual, mostly subclinical inflammation can be associated with enhanced relapse risk has prompted investigators to test whether imaging can help predict flare risk. This concept is also stimulated by observations that a substantial proportion of patients with RA in remission can show signs of synovitis by ultrasound or MRI. In fact, three studies found that synovitis detected by ultrasound, mainly Doppler-detected synovitis, is a strong predictor of failure of successful tapering of biologic DMARD. Naredo et al investigated patients with RA in sustained remission (DAS28 <2.6 over 6 months) who tapered TNF inhibitors.50 Patients with Power Doppler positive synovitis had a significantly higher risk of relapse than those without residual inflammation. If combined with baseline DAS28 scores, predictive value of ultrasound for relapse risk was especially high. Iwamoto et al reached similar conclusions about the likelihood of relapse when stopping TNF inhibitors in 42 patients with RA in sustained remission.51 In addition, a recent study by Alivernini et al showed that synovial hypertrophy is associated with higher risk of flares after tapering and withdrawing TNF inhibitors.52 Of particular interest, the authors also showed that absence of ultrasound hypertrophy is associated with only minimal synovial changes in the histology, supporting the accuracy of ultrasound examination to detect residual disease activity. Also, preliminary data from the POET study support the concept that the presence of synovitis by ultrasound enhances the risk for flare during DMARD tapering.47 Hence, both presence of grey scale synovitis and Power Doppler synovitis can be associated with a higher flare risk. A combination of clinical and imaging remission could, therefore, represent a potentially attractive starting point for successful DMARD tapering. Whether a time-consuming comprehensive assessment of many joints by ultrasound or a more focused approach through a few index joints is sufficient, however, remains to be determined.
With respect to serum biomarkers the best-studied predictor of relapse to date is ACPA positivity. In the RETRO study, ACPA status clearly indicated higher relapse risk with lower chances to maintain remission when ACPAs are present.15 Data from other studies, like BeSt and HIT-HARD (High induction therapy with anti-rheumatic drugs), as well as preliminary data from the POET study support this concept.33 ,34 ,49 The hypothesis that underlying autoimmunity may indeed act as a driving force for inflammation in RA promoting a higher likelihood for relapse is additionally supported by observations from Tanaka et al, who found that continuous presence of rheumatoid factor lowers the likelihood for successful withdrawal of TNF inhibitors.53
To evaluate remission more objectively, attempts have been made to assess immune activity in RA using serum tests. While C-reactive protein level is widely measured to assess inflammation in RA, it may not provide an adequate picture of inflammation and related processes in the joint (eg, tissue destruction). Hence, new serum biomarkers, which address processes other than the acute phase response may be helpful in better predicting the risk of relapse in patients with RA de-escalating DMARDs. Based on the heterogeneity of the patient population, however, several of such biomarkers may be needed to allow accurate prediction of relapses. Recently, composite biomarker testing including acute phase reactants, cytokines and metalloproteinases has shown to improve prediction of relapse risk in patients tapering DMARDs in the RETRO study.54 Thus, the presence of elevated serum markers of inflammation increases the 1-year relapse risk from 13% to 32% in ACPA negative patients and from 33% to 76% in ACPA positive patients. These findings indicate that the assessment of subclinical inflammation by laboratory testing may provide a useful tool to determine a patient's risk of flare and to define high-risk groups in whom DMARD tapering should be postponed.
Research agenda and unanswered questions
Tapering and stopping DMARDs provide the opportunity to develop new insights into the pathogenesis and clinical course of RA, reconceptualising RA from a life-long chronic inflammatory disease into a more acute or subacute process, which can erupt but then also resolve under certain circumstances, especially if appropriate treatment is given. While efforts in the treatment of RA so far have been primarily directed towards controlling inflammation and related immune cell dysfunctions, the future challenge in RA treatment will be to understand how remission is maintained over time, how subclinical disease can be detected and evaluated and how to distinguish a cure of disease from effective but incomplete suppression of inflammation (figure 1).
It will be important to define an operating definition of remission in the perspective of DMARD tapering, with respect to quality and duration. At present, remission in RA is predominantly defined by clinical instruments detecting signs and symptoms of inflammation, such as joint tenderness and swelling, rather than the extent of synovial inflammation itself. Moreover, even clinical remission definitions based on DAS scores are rather loose and allow presence of residual clinical disease activity. In fact, ‘remission’ likely resembles different conditions varying in their risk to relapse to the original disease state—in this case, active RA (figures 1 and 2). DMARDs usually reduce the inflammatory burden of RA and ideally bring patients from one of the three clinical activity states (low, moderate, high) into ‘remission’. In this context, immediate recognition and treatment of early RA is of paramount importance to achieve disease control, before extensive synovitis and joint destruction have occurred. Despite a virtual absence of signs and symptoms of disease, patients with RA considered to be in clinical remission may nevertheless have subclinical inflammation and/or the autoimmune changes related to RA (figure 1). Therefore, a more cautious approach with tapering existing DMARDs rather than abruptly discontinuing them is generally recommended. Apart from mere clinical remission in terms of joint manifestations, imaging/serologic remission may have to be considered, where synovitis has also completely ceased. The lower relapse rates observed in patients with normal ultrasound examination and in those with negative serum biomarkers of inflammation score support the biological relevance of this concept. Finally, and probably most rarely, a reset of autoimmunity in RA may occur (‘immunological remission’), which is clearly still the most challenging treatment goal (figure 2). Taken together, these concepts suggest that studies using a stricter definition of ‘remission’ based on (i) the true absence of clinical signs of inflammation, (ii) the normalisation of serum and imaging marker of inflammation and potentially also (iii) the disappearance of autoantibodies (seroconversion) are needed as they could allow to achieve even higher rates of drug-free remission and even cure of disease.
Tapering and stopping DMARDs will also allow better understanding of the pathways and markers that indicate resolution of inflammation in RA. Little is now known about these processes, which counteract proinflammatory cytokines and allow reestablishment of homeostasis in the joint. Tapering studies have taught us that, in some patients with RA, homeostasis appears to be restored since such patients do not relapse if drugs are withdrawn. Hence, the whole concept of cure of RA will benefit from data from tapering studies. Many issues require resolution: For instance, little is known about progression, arrest or regression of structural bone damage during tapering of DMARDs. Conceptually, suboptimal control of disease could result in progression of damage. Currently, no data support such a scenario, but information on structural progression in tapering studies is limited. In this context, it is reassuring that some data suggest that tapering of drugs does not lead to enhanced damage, especially if appropriate monitoring occurs and treatment adjusted. Hence, Tanaka et al showed no progression of radiographic damage when patients stopped TNF inhibitors in their HONOR study.24 Reinitiation of therapy, if relapse occurs, seems important in this context. As treatment is usually initiated promptly after relapse, patients are not exposed to significant periods of high disease activity, which may be required to trigger damage. In addition, data several studies such as DOSERA, DRESS, RETRO and STRASS suggest that reintroduction of the original treatment regimen allows successful reinduction of remission in virtually all patients with relapses. Future analysis of imaging data including ultrasound, MRI and CT are warranted to finally answer these questions.
Other questions concern the concept that even patients in remission may benefit from ongoing therapy due to ‘extraarticular’ actions of drugs, such as methotrexate on the cardiovascular system potentially leading to less mortality. Hence, tapering may require true remission of inflammation rather than absence of symptomatic joint disease. In consequence, biomarkers need to be developed that allow distinguishing true absence of inflammation from the absence of symptoms. These considerations are also important in light of the rather short follow-up periods of current tapering studies, which are usually confined to 1 year. For long-term drug-free remission, however, true absence of inflammation may become increasingly important. Finally, it remains unclear whether patients who have already experienced a relapse and in whom DMARD treatment has been reintroduced should undergo another tapering attempt.
Conclusion
In summary, evidence from a series of clinical studies suggests that tapering and stopping DMARDs is a feasible strategy in a subset of patients with RA who have entered clinical remission. Present data are astonishingly consistent in showing that some remission patients are able to successfully taper and/or withdraw treatment without experiencing flare, as a loss of complete control of disease activity, in the subsequent observation period. However, the ideal profile of the patient who profits most from de-escalation of DMARD treatment remains to be defined. Complete withdrawal of DMARDs may only be possible in the presence of full remission. The search for biomarkers for assessing persistent subclinical disease activity and predicting flare risk is ongoing and substantial progress has been achieved by using imaging and serum markers to identify patients with low or high relapse risk. Still, more efforts are needed in studying this growing population of remission patients in order to facilitate the decision making for patients and physicians when and how to taper and stop their treatment. At the moment, it is at least reassuring that reintroduction of DMARDs usually allows rapid regain of the remission status and hence can be pursued without substantial concern if appropriate monitoring is ascertained.15
References
Supplementary materials
Lay summary
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Footnotes
Handling editor Tore K Kvien
Contributors GS, PE, YT, GB, DSP, EN, BF and RvV wrote the article.
Competing interests GS has received speakers and consultancy fees from Abbvie, Bristol-Myers, Celgene, Chugai, Crescendo, GlaxoSmithKline, Eli Lilly, Novartis, Roche and UCB. PE has received speakers and consultancy fees from Abbvie, Bristol-Myers, Eli Lilly, MSD, Novartis, Pfizer, Roche, Samsung, Sandoz and UCB. YS has received speakers and consultancy fees from Abbvie, Chugai, Daiichi-Sankyo, Bristol-Myers, Mitsubishi-Tanabe, Astellas, Takeda, Pfizer, Teijin, Asahi-kasei, YL Biologics, Sanofi, Janssen, Eli Lilly, GlaxoSmithKline and research grants from Mitsubishi-Tanabe, Takeda, Daiichi-Sankyo, Chugai, Bristol-Myers, MSD, Astellas, Abbvie and Eisai. GB has received speakers and consultancy fees from AbbVie, BMS, MSD, Pfizer, UCB and Roche. EN has received speaker fees from Abbvie, Roche, BMS, Pfizer, UCB and Novartis. DP has received speakers and consultancy fees from Bio-Rad Laboratories, Biogen Idec, Crescendo and Pfizer. BF has received speakers and consultancy fees from AbbVie, BMS, Celgene, Hospira, MSD, Nordic Pharma, Novartis, Pfizer, Roche, Sanofi, SOBI, UCB and research grants from Pfizer, MSD and Roche. RvV has received speakers and consultancy fees from Abbvie, Biotest, Bristol-Myers, Celgene, Crescendo, GlaxoSmithKline Eli Lilly, Janssen, Merck, Novartis, Pfizer, Roche, UCB and Vertex as well as research grants by Abbvie, Amgen, BMS, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Roche and UCB.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.