The value of ultrasound-defined tenosynovitis and synovitis in the prediction of persistent arthritis.
Author
Sahbudin, IlfitaSingh, Ruchir
de Pablo, Paola
Rankin, Elizabeth
Rhodes, Benjamin
Justice, Elizabeth
Derrett-Smith, Emma
Amft, Nicole
Narayan, Nehal
McGrath, Catherine
Baskar, Sangeetha
Trickey, Jeanette
Maybury, Mark
Raza, Karim

Filer, Andrew
Affiliation
Institute of Inflammation and Ageing; University of Birmingham; Sandwell and West Birmingham HS TrustPublication date
2023-03Subject
Rheumatology
Metadata
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Objectives: The value of US-defined tenosynovitis in predicting the persistence of inflammatory arthritis is not well described. In particular, the predictive utility of US-defined tenosynovitis of larger tendons is yet to be reported. We assessed the value of US-defined tenosynovitis alongside US-defined synovitis and clinical and serological variables in predicting persistent arthritis in an inception cohort of DMARD-naïve patients with early arthritis. Methods: One hundred and fifty DMARD-naïve patients with clinically apparent synovitis of one or more joints and a symptom duration of ≤3 months underwent baseline clinical, laboratory and US (of 19 bilateral joints and 16 bilateral tendon compartments) assessments. Outcomes were classified as persistent or resolving arthritis after 18 months' follow-up. The predictive value of US-defined tenosynovitis for persistent arthritis was compared with those of US-defined synovitis, and clinical and serological variables. Results: At 18 months, 99 patients (66%) had developed persistent arthritis and 51 patients (34%) had resolving disease. Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that US-detected digit flexor tenosynovitis [odds ratio (OR): 6.6, 95% CI: 2.0 , 22.1, P = 0.002] provided independent predictive data for persistence over and above the presence of US-detected joint synovitis and RF antibodies. In the RF/ACPA-negative subcohort, US-defined digit flexor tenosynovitis remained a significant predictive variable (OR: 4.7, 95% CI: 1.4, 15.8, P = 0.012), even after adjusting for US-defined joint synovitis. Conclusion: US-defined tenosynovitis provided independent predictive data for the development of persistent arthritis. The predictive role of US-defined digit flexor tenosynovitis should be further assessed; investigators should consider including this tendon site as a candidate variable when designing imaging-based predictive algorithms for persistent inflammatory arthritis developmentCitation
Sahbudin I, Singh R, De Pablo P, Rankin E, Rhodes B, Justice E, Derrett-Smith E, Amft N, Narayan N, McGrath C, Baskar S, Trickey J, Maybury M, Raza K, Filer A. The value of ultrasound-defined tenosynovitis and synovitis in the prediction of persistent arthritis. Rheumatology (Oxford). 2023 Mar 1;62(3):1057-1068. doi: 10.1093/rheumatology/keac199.NType
ArticlePMID
35412605Journal
RheumatologyPublisher
Oxford University Pressae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1093/rheumatology/keac199