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Title: Signs of forefeet joint synovitis have a limited impact on patient's perception of rheumatoid arthritis disease activity and acute-phase reactants. Author: Naniwa T, Iwagaitsu S, Tamechika S, Maeda S, Niimi A. Journal: Mod Rheumatol; 2016; 26(2):200-5. PubMed ID: 26166492. Abstract: OBJECTIVES: To determine the prevalence and distribution of signs of synovitis in the residual joints in remission defined by the American College of Rheumatology/European League Against Rheumatism (ACR/EULAR) rheumatoid arthritis (RA) remission criteria and the role of their components in preventing misclassification due to reduced joint count. METHODS: The cross-sectional observational data of RA patients including full joint counts were analyzed. Definitions of remission used were the ACR/EULAR RA remission criteria and their modifications using full joint counts with the same thresholds of the items and the calculated results. RESULTS: A total of 304 RA patients with 3,149 observations could be analyzed. Patients in remission according to the ACR/EULAR remission criteria can still show residual disease activity in the feet in up to 27% of the population with a 28-joint count remission. Residual disease activity has no impact on patient's global assessment for current disease activity, when signs of concomitant ankle joint synovitis were absent. CONCLUSIONS: RA patients in remission according to the ACR/EULAR definitions can still show signs of synovitis mostly in the forefeet joints. Acute-phase reactants and patient's global assessment for current disease activity have little impact in mitigating the limitation of reduced joint count.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]