RA & OP Relationship
Conditions
Brief summary
This study aims to explore the association between RA and osteoporosis and highlight the risk factors that RA patients have that may cause or affect osteoporosis progress.
Detailed description
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is an autoimmune chronic connective tissue disease that produces persistent systemic inflammation, with joint inflammation leading to function loss and joint destruction. It can finally lead to some serious systematic disorders, such as cardiovascular, pulmonary, skeletal, and psychological disorders. One of the most severe comorbidities of RA is osteoporosis (OP), which is a chronic metabolic skeletal disease leading to an increased risk of low trauma fracture, and many factors can play a role in increasing this association including treating RA patients with glucocorticoid over a long duration, chronic joints inflammation, calcium malabsorption, age of the patients, and genetics. Osteoporosis is characterized by microarchitectural deterioration of bone tissue and low bone mass. The most commonly used measurement for OP is bone mineral density (BMD) and DEXA (dual x-ray absorptiometry) Scans. Osteoporosis can result in devastating physical, psychosocial, and economic consequences. Still, it is often overlooked and undertreated, in large part because it is clinically silent; there are no symptoms before a fracture occurs. Epidemiological studies indicate that about 60-80% of RA patients have a comorbidity of OP. These two kinds of complex diseases may share some common genetic mechanisms and biological processes. For example, proinflammatory cytokines including TNF-α, IL-17, IL-6, and IL-1 have been reported to be closely associated with OP, and they also play important roles in the development of RA. Also, the inflammation in the joints increases bone absorption and makes RA patients susceptible to bone loss and osteoporosis development. One of the primary drugs recommended for the treatment of RA is a corticosteroid, glucocorticoid (GC). Both systemic corticosteroid and intraarticular corticosteroid are proven to be risk factors for developing secondary osteoporosis and osteoporotic fracture. The risk increases with the long duration of use and using a high dose. Longer duration and severity of RA were also indicated as independent risk factors for vertebral fractures. The American College of Rheumatology (ACR) recommended increasing the awareness of RA patients about BMD and getting DXA done for identifying a patient at risk of osteoporosis.
Interventions
DEXA (dual x-ray absorptiometry) Scans which measure bone density (thickness and strength of bones) by passing a high and low energy x-ray beam (a form of ionizing radiation) through the body, usually in the hip, the spine and the bones of the hands and can easily diagnose osteoporosis.
Sponsors
Study design
Eligibility
Inclusion criteria
* Patient more than 18 years old classified as rheumatoid arthritis based on ACR/EULAR 2010 Classification criteria.
Exclusion criteria
* Patients with other clinical conditions that causes secondary osteoporosis as Diabetes Mellitus, renal, liver diseases, thyroid and parathyroid disorders.
Design outcomes
Primary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| The percentage of patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis who have Osteoporosis. | baseline | to explore the association between RA and osteoporosis and highlight the risk factors that RA patients have that may cause or affect osteoporosis progress by measuring the percentage of patents with RA who have osteoporosis. |
Secondary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Correlation between age, disease duration, disease activity, and treatment with osteoporosis | baseline | Correlation between age, disease duration, disease activity, and treatment with osteoporosis |