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Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and Psoriatic Arthritis (PsA) are types of inflammatory arthritis. They are disabling conditions caused by inflammation in joints that can lead to pain, stiffness, fatigue and joint damage. There is currently no cure but treatment is aimed at reducing joint inflammation. Some of the most promising new therapies work by interfering with the binding of a molecule called tumour necrosis factor (TNF). In recent years, new anti-TNF drugs (such as adalimumab, etanercept and certolizumab) have been developed that block the action of TNF and reduce this inflammation. These drugs are very effective in controlling inflammation for many patients whose arthritis has not responded to other therapies. Some patients can take these medications for a long time. If a patient is stable on their rheumatoid arthritis biologic or biosimilar, tapering the drug is often considered.
The investigators are planning to look at drug level and anti-drug antibody testing to guide anti-TNF tapering (reducing) decisions in UK patients with RA who have stable, reduced arthritis symptoms. The investigators think that measuring these drug levels and anti-drug antibodies in blood samples will be useful for guiding this process, but the investigators can't be sure. It is important to do this safely so the patient doesn't experience a flare of their disease symptoms. The study will be used to determine whether a much larger study to assess the usefulness of these measurements would be achievable.
This study will assess whether measuring biomarkers (measurable substances in the blood) that may affect a patient's response to treatment.
If a patient are eligible to take part, they will be randomly allocated to one of the following groups;
Full description
Participants will be randomly allocated to feedback of their drug levels / antidrug antibody status to their consultant prior to tapering, or not, in a 1:1 ratio.
Patients would be recruited at the point at which the decision is made to begin tapering their biologic.
The NHS site teams will be informed which arm of the study the participant has been randomised to, as they will be made aware of patient test results. Participants will not be blinded to which intervention they receive. University of Manchester Researchers undertaking the laboratory tests and those entering study data will be blinded.
The consent form, registration form, baseline CRF and baseline participant questionnaire should then be returned to the study coordinator at CfMR in the pre-paid packaging provided.
A baseline DAS28 score must be provided. This should be from no more than a month before the date of consent. If this cannot be provided the patient is not eligible to take part.
Recruiting teams can start to taper the patient's medication immediately after consent on to the TAPER trial.
Blood samples will be taken at the following time points;
The researchers would like each of the follow-up visits to occur as closely to the 6 month and 12 month time points as possible. However, the researchers will accept the following visit windows;
• 6 and 12 month time points; +/- 1 month The University of Manchester will return the blood results to site for participants randomised to the arm where results are returned. This will be sent via email with appropriate treatment advice, as per the information in section 4 within 4 weeks of sample receipt. The site team will receive these results by letter in advance of the follow-up visit and will have the opportunity to discuss these with the Chief Investigator, Prof. Anne Barton, in advance of the visit if required. For participants in the control arm (no feedback of results), the blood samples will be collected and tested in the same way but results will not be provided to the treating clinician.
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51 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Sarah L Ashton; Anne C Barton, FRCP PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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