AI Article Synopsis

  • Fatigue is a frequent issue in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients, and this study evaluated how pain and disease activity impact fatigue relief in two clinical trials using the drug baricitinib.
  • The trials, RA-BEAM and RA-BEACON, compared baricitinib with adalimumab and assessed their effects on fatigue, disease activity, and pain in RA patients with inadequate responses to previous treatments.
  • Results showed that both drugs significantly improved fatigue, and the improvements were largely linked to reductions in pain and disease activity, highlighting the importance of managing these factors for better fatigue outcomes.

Article Abstract

Background/objective: Fatigue is common in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). We assessed the relative impact of pain and disease activity on improvements in fatigue in 2 phase 3 baricitinib clinical trials.

Methods: RA-BEAM (NCT01710358) and RA-BEACON (NCT01721044) were randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled studies in adults with moderate to severe RA. RA-BEAM assessed baricitinib + methotrexate (MTX) and adalimumab + MTX in patients with prior inadequate response/intolerance (IR) to MTX (MTX-IR). RA-BEACON assessed patients with IR to ≥1 biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (bDMARD-IR). Measures included the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Fatigue scale, Clinical Disease Activity Index (CDAI) for RA, and pain visual analog scale (VAS). Analyses were implemented separately for each study.

Results: Significant improvements were seen in disease activity and pain, which were greater with baricitinib versus adalimumab. A statistically significant improvement was seen in fatigue with both active treatments versus placebo. Moderate correlations were observed between improvements in disease activity and fatigue and between improvements in pain and fatigue in both MTX-IR and bDMARD-IR patients. Reductions in pain (≥50%) and remission or low disease activity (CDAI ≤10) had significant associations with fatigue improvement at week 24. In mediation analysis, improvements in fatigue attributable to CDAI and pain VAS in MTX-IR patients were 31% and 52%, respectively, for baricitinib, and 30% and 47%, respectively, for adalimumab. In bDMARD-IR patients, improvement in fatigue was attributed 48% to CDAI and 48% to pain VAS.

Conclusions: In both MTX-IR and bDMARD-IR patients, a large proportion of improvements in fatigue across treatment arms were accounted for by improvements in pain and disease activity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10045960PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/RHU.0000000000001924DOI Listing

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