Re-escalation of Treatment in Older Adults with Rheumatoid Arthritis After Anti-TNF Therapy De-escalation
Jiha Lee, Jonathan Martindale, Una Makris, Julie Bynum

TL;DR
This study examines how often older adults with rheumatoid arthritis restart anti-TNF treatments after reducing them, finding that over half do so within a year.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into re-escalation patterns of anti-TNF therapy in older RA patients following de-escalation.
Findings
61.1% of older RA patients re-escalated anti-TNF therapy within a year of de-escalation.
Re-escalation was more likely among Black and Hispanic patients and those with fewer comorbidities.
Abstract
Older adults with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) treated with biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (bDMARDs), including anti-TNFs, are at an increased risk of serious infections and other adverse effects. Guidelines recommend de-escalating DMARDs for patients with low disease activity or remission to optimize the benefit-harm ratio of treatment. In a prior study, we observed that 20% of older adults with RA de-escalated anti-TNFs. This follow-up study examines the prevalence and factors associated with the re-escalation of treatment after anti-TNF de-escalation. We used 20% Medicare data from 2009-2017 to identify RA patients ≥66 years of age on anti-TNF therapy (Adalimumab, Etanercept, Certolizumab, or Golimumab), with de-escalation by cessation (> 90-day gap) or by taper (>50% effective dose reduction), and at least one rheumatologist visit pre- post-de-escalation (i.e.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRheumatoid Arthritis Research and Therapies · Biosimilars and Bioanalytical Methods · Autoimmune and Inflammatory Disorders Research
