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Background:
Existing criteria for AS/SpA such as mod. New York, ESSG, or Amor criteria for classification and/or diagnosis of spondyloarthritis have limitations when applied to early disease. Moreover, MRI is not part of any of the established criteria and the precise role of MRI in early axial disease has not been fully defined yet. Even less is known about sacroiliac (SI) changes in SpA patients with peripheral symptoms. A pilot study using data from 'paper patients' led to new candidate criteria for early spondyloarthritis. Subsequently, the members of the ASAS International Working Group decided to conduct a prospective multi-centre study to evaluate (validate) the new candidate criteria, and to assess their performance as diagnostic criteria.
Aims of the study:
Full description
Background:
Existing criteria for AS/SpA such as mod. New York, ESSG, or Amor criteria for classification and/or diagnosis of spondyloarthritis have limitations when applied to early disease. Moreover, MRI is not part of any of the established criteria and the precise role of MRI in early axial disease has not been fully defined yet. Even less is known about sacroiliac (SI) changes in SpA patients with peripheral symptoms. A pilot study using data from 'paper patients' led to new candidate criteria for early spondyloarthritis. Subsequently, the members of the ASAS International Working Group decided to conduct a prospective multi-centre study to evaluate (validate) the new candidate criteria, and to assess their performance as diagnostic criteria.
Aims of the study:
Participating centres:
All ASAS members working in clinical practice are invited to participate in the study. More than one ASAS member/ rheumatologist per centre may participate.
Inclusion criteria:
Include newly referred patients if
onset of symptoms (back pain / arthritis / enthesitis) < 45 years and
undiagnosed* disease with the following symptoms:
chronic back pain (duration of back pain more than 3 months)
or / and peripheral arthritis (asymmetric arthritis / predominantly of the lower limbs)
or / and enthesitis
or / and dactylitis
The patient is being referred to your department because of chronic back pain, arthritis, enthesitis or dactylitis but has not been diagnosed confidently before by the referring physician/rheumatologist as having SpA or as definitely not having SpA. If the referring physician/GP/rheumatologist suspects SpA but is not certain about it, the patient is considered as undiagnosed.
Endpoints of the study:
Further study rules:
Data documentation:
The results of the clinical history, physical examination, blood tests, radiographs, and MRIs, and the diagnosis will be entered into the CRF locally by the ASAS member during/after the diagnostic work-up. The diagnosis will be made by the local rheumatologist (ASAS member or an experienced colleague at the centre). The completed CRF should be sent to the coordinating centre (Berlin) for data check and data entry. A copy of the CRF should remain locally at the study centre. The name, date of birth, address, and telephone number must also be kept locally in the centre since follow-up assessments after 2 years and after 5 years are planned.
Sample size and inclusion period:
It is estimated that about 400-500 patients with SpA (ca 250-300 axial and 150-200 peripheral SpA) with complete data sets are needed to allow for a reliable comparison of new candidate criteria with established criteria. Since the prevalence of SpA among newly referred patients with unclear diagnoses varies from centre to centre any calculation of the control group size (and thus total sample size) is bound to be inaccurate. Therefore, the proposal is that each centre recruits as many consecutive patients as possible until indicated by the study coordinators to stop inclusion. The study coordinators can adequately terminate the inclusion period only if the completed CRFs are sent within a reasonably short period of time (< 2 weeks) to the coordinating centre. Data entry and data analysis will be done at the coordinating centre.
DNA/RNA-analysis and biomarker analysis:
In addition to the clinical study which aims to arrive at new classification and diagnostic criteria, two groups of researches will perform laboratory experiments in patients from selected centres: Genetic polymorphisms and gene products (RNA) which are potentially associated with spondyloarthritis will be analysed by Prof. Matthew Brown in Brisbane, Australia. A second group of researchers (Prof. Walter Maksymowych, Canada, Prof. Mikkel Ostergaard, Denmark, Prof. Rob Inman, US, and Prof. David Yu, US) will analyse several biomarkers such as cartilage break-down or bone formation proteins in serum and/or plasma. Data from both experimental projects may be of potential diagnostic value in the future and/or may reveal novel insights into pathophysiological mechanisms of spondyloarthritis.
Longterm follow-up:
A second follow-up visit of all patients 2 years after the first encounter and also 5 years after the first encounter is highly warranted since diagnoses may change over time and the final diagnosis after long-term follow up is the most important gold standard. Thus, a record containing the names, addresses, and phone numbers of all patients included in the study must be stored locally at the study site. The patient is best informed at the first visit that a follow-up assessments 2 and 5 years later are envisaged.
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Inclusion criteria
Include newly referred patients if:
Onset of symptoms (back pain/arthritis/enthesitis) < 45 years
Undiagnosed disease with the following symptoms:
Exclusion criteria
992 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
In-Ho Song, MD; Martin Rudwaleit, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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