This is the largest study of RA-ILD in the UK. Anti-CCP antibodies were strongly associated with RA-ILD in both sexes. Smoking was strongly associated with ILD in males, which may explain the higher frequency of RA-ILD in men. The predominant HRCT pattern was UIP and most patients had limited disease at presentation. The presence of UIP and extensive disease are associated with increased mortality. Baseline gas transfer is a useful screening tool for ILD, while the preservation of VC at baseline might predict limited disease on HRCT.
Short-term trials of bronchodilator drugs are widely used to assess patients with stable chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), but there is an uncertainty about the equivalence of the FEV1 response to beta-agonists and anticholinergic drugs, their relative ability to identify patients likely to improve with corticosteroids, the most appropriate way to express the results of these tests, and whether age or allergic status affects the beta-agonist and anticholinergic response differently. We studied 100 consecutive patients with stable COPD (mean FEV1, 0.96 +/- 0.48 L; mean age, 62 +/- 8 yr). Spirometry was measured before and after either 5 mg of nebulized salbutamol or 500 micrograms of nebulized ipratropium bromide and repeated after 2 wk of 30 mg of oral prednisolone daily. Total IgE, specific RAST, and skin prick testing values were recorded. Using modified American Thoracic Society response criteria, 33 patients failed to bronchodilate after the acute trials, 16 responded only to nebulized salbutamol, 17 to nebulized ipratropium, and 34 to both drugs. Twenty-two patients improved after corticosteroids. This was usually detected by a positive acute trial response (salbutamol 90% specific; ipratropium 84% specific). Baseline FEV1 differed between days, and in those who responded on only 1 day, this variation correlating with the response to ipratropium (r = 0.66). Expressing the response criterion as a percentage change in the available bronchodilatation increased the numbers responding with a high baseline FEV1, and vice versa. Neither age nor allergic status was related to the change in FEV1 after either drug in these patients. In COPD patients, testing with high-dose nebulized bronchodilators identifies a substantial number of partially reversible patients whatever age it is employed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Objective
This study explores whether the prognosis of interstitial lung disease in rheumatoid arthritis (RA-ILD) has improved over time and assesses the potential influence of drug therapy in a large multicentre UK network.
Methods
We analysed data from 18 UK centres on patients meeting criteria for both RA and ILD diagnosed over a 25-year period. Data included age, disease duration, outcome and cause of death. We compared all cause and respiratory mortality between RA controls and RA-ILD patients, assessing the influence of specific drugs on mortality in four quartiles based on year of diagnosis.
Results
A total of 290 RA-ILD patients were identified. All cause (respiratory) mortality was increased at 30% (18%) compared with controls 21% (7%) (P =0.02). Overall, prognosis improved over quartiles with median age at death rising from 63 years to 78 years (P =0.01). No effect on mortality was detected as a result of DMARD use in RA-ILD. Relative risk (RR) of death from any cause was increased among patients who had received anti-TNF therapy [2.09 (1.1–4.0)] P =0.03, while RR was lower in those treated with rituximab [0.52(0.1–2.1)] or mycophenolate [0.65 (0.2–2.0)]. Patients receiving rituximab as their first biologic had longer three (92%), five (82%) and seven year (80%) survival than those whose first biologic was an anti-TNF agent (82%, 76% and 64%, respectively) (P =0.037).
Discussion
This large retrospective multicentre study demonstrates survival of patients with RA-ILD has improved. This may relate to the increasing use of specific immunosuppressive and biologic agents.
Spirometry before and after an inhaled beta agonist or a course of oral prednisolone is widely used to detect reversible airflow limitation in patients with chronic obstructive lung disease. How many of these patients have a response and how the response to beta agonists relates to the response to corticosteroids is not clear. In 127 outpatients (mean (SD) FEV, 0-92 (0-38)
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