Abhishek Abhishek, Matthew J Grainge, Tim Card, Hywel C Williams, Maarten W Taal, Guruprasad P Aithal, Christopher P Fox, Christian D Mallen, Matthew D Stevenson, Georgina Nakafero, Richard D Riley
{"title":"Risk-stratified monitoring for sulfasalazine toxicity: prognostic model development and validation.","authors":"Abhishek Abhishek, Matthew J Grainge, Tim Card, Hywel C Williams, Maarten W Taal, Guruprasad P Aithal, Christopher P Fox, Christian D Mallen, Matthew D Stevenson, Georgina Nakafero, Richard D Riley","doi":"10.1101/2023.12.15.23299947","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Background: Sulfasalazine induced cytopenia, nephrotoxicity, and hepatotoxicity is uncommon during long-term treatment. Some guidelines recommend three monthly monitoring blood-tests indefinitely while others recommend stopping monitoring after one year. To rationalise monitoring we developed and validated a prognostic model for clinically significant blood, liver, or kidney toxicity during established sulfasalazine treatment.\nDesign: Retrospective cohort study.\nSetting: UK primary-care. Data from Clinical Practice Research Datalink Gold and Aurum formed independent development and validation cohorts.\nParticipants: Age ≥18 years, new diagnosis of an inflammatory condition and sulfasalazine prescription.\nStudy period: 01/01/2007 to 31/12/2019.\nOutcome: Sulfasalazine discontinuation with abnormal monitoring blood-test result.\nAnalysis: Patients were followed-up from six months after first primary-care prescription to the earliest of outcome, drug discontinuation, death, 5 years, or 31/12/2019.Penalised Cox regression was performed to develop the risk equation. Multiple imputation handled missing predictor data. Model performance was assessed in terms of calibration and discrimination.\nResults: 8,936 participants were included in the development cohort (473 events, 23,299 person-years) and 5,203 participants were included in the validation cohort (280 events, 12,867 person-years).Nine candidate predictors were included. The optimism adjusted R2D and Royston D statistic in the development data were 0.13 and 0.79 respectively. The calibration slope (95% confidence interval (CI)) and Royston D statistic (95% CI) in validation cohort was 1.19 (0.96-1.43) and 0.87 (0.67-1.07) respectively.\nConclusion: This prognostic model for sulfasalazine toxicity utilises readily available data and should be used to risk-stratify blood-test monitoring during established sulfasalazine treatment.","PeriodicalId":501212,"journal":{"name":"medRxiv - Rheumatology","volume":"96 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-12-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"medRxiv - Rheumatology","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.12.15.23299947","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Sulfasalazine induced cytopenia, nephrotoxicity, and hepatotoxicity is uncommon during long-term treatment. Some guidelines recommend three monthly monitoring blood-tests indefinitely while others recommend stopping monitoring after one year. To rationalise monitoring we developed and validated a prognostic model for clinically significant blood, liver, or kidney toxicity during established sulfasalazine treatment.
Design: Retrospective cohort study.
Setting: UK primary-care. Data from Clinical Practice Research Datalink Gold and Aurum formed independent development and validation cohorts.
Participants: Age ≥18 years, new diagnosis of an inflammatory condition and sulfasalazine prescription.
Study period: 01/01/2007 to 31/12/2019.
Outcome: Sulfasalazine discontinuation with abnormal monitoring blood-test result.
Analysis: Patients were followed-up from six months after first primary-care prescription to the earliest of outcome, drug discontinuation, death, 5 years, or 31/12/2019.Penalised Cox regression was performed to develop the risk equation. Multiple imputation handled missing predictor data. Model performance was assessed in terms of calibration and discrimination.
Results: 8,936 participants were included in the development cohort (473 events, 23,299 person-years) and 5,203 participants were included in the validation cohort (280 events, 12,867 person-years).Nine candidate predictors were included. The optimism adjusted R2D and Royston D statistic in the development data were 0.13 and 0.79 respectively. The calibration slope (95% confidence interval (CI)) and Royston D statistic (95% CI) in validation cohort was 1.19 (0.96-1.43) and 0.87 (0.67-1.07) respectively.
Conclusion: This prognostic model for sulfasalazine toxicity utilises readily available data and should be used to risk-stratify blood-test monitoring during established sulfasalazine treatment.