失血量对关节炎患者身体功能的影响:一项汇总分析

Vibeke Strand MD , Byron Cryer MD , Xuemei Luo PhD , Andrew G. Bushmakin MS , Joseph C. Cappelleri PhD , Brian Cuffel PhD , George Sands MD , Annlouise R. Assaf PhD
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引用次数: 4

摘要

背景和目的与上消化道出血相比,使用非选择性非甾体类抗炎药(NSAID)导致下消化道出血的临床后果文献记载较少。本研究的目的是使用SF-36评估大量关节炎人群中临床显著的胃肠道失血对健康相关生活质量(HRQoL)的影响。研究设计:为了比较治疗相关的HRQoL变化,14项多国随机对照试验(持续时间2-52周)的数据汇总,涉及14173名骨关节炎/类风湿性关节炎患者,接受塞来昔布与安慰剂或活性比较剂非甾体抗炎药或两者同时治疗。临床显著失血定义为血红蛋白较基线降低≥2 g/dL,而无变化(从- 1到+1 g/dL)。结果血红蛋白无变化的受试者报告SF-36各域均有统计学意义和临床意义的改善。在临床上有明显失血的患者中,身体疼痛(男性和女性)和角色身体和活力领域(女性)均有改善。显著失血量受试者与血红蛋白无变化受试者的SF-36评分变化表明,在生理功能(男女)和生理功能(男性)领域(基线血红蛋白值分别≤14和≤15 g/dL的女性和男性中,差异具有统计学意义和临床意义。结论无失血量受试者报告的治疗相关的身体功能改善在失血量显著的受试者中并不明显。组间差异具有统计学意义和临床意义,当基线血红蛋白水平女性≤14 g/dL,男性≤15 g/dL时,差异更为明显。对于关节炎患者,应保证使用显著失血发生率较低的药物。
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Effect of Blood Loss on Physical Function in Arthritis Patients: A Pooled Analysis

Background and Objectives

The clinical consequences of lower gastrointestinal bleeding resulting from nonselective nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) use are less well documented than upper gastrointestinal bleeding. The aim of this study was to assess the effect of clinically significant gastrointestinal blood loss on health-related quality of life (HRQoL) using the SF-36 in a large arthritis population.

Study Design

To compare treatment-associated changes in HRQoL, data from 14 multinational randomized controlled trials (2–52 weeks’ duration) involving 14,173 subjects with osteoarthritis/rheumatoid arthritis, treated with celecoxib versus placebo or active comparator NSAIDs or both, were pooled. Clinically significant blood loss was defined as hemoglobin decreases ≥2 g/dL from baseline versus no change (from −1 to +1 g/dL).

Results

Subjects with no change in hemoglobin reported statistically significant and clinically meaningful improvements in all SF-36 domains. In those with clinically significant blood loss, improvements were reported in bodily pain (both females and males), and role physical and vitality domains (females) only. Change scores in SF-36 between subjects with significant blood loss and those with no changes in hemoglobin demonstrated statistically significant and clinically meaningful differences in physical function (both females and males) and role physical (males) domains—more pronounced in women and men with baseline hemoglobin values ≤14 and ≤15 g/dL, respectively.

Conclusions

Treatment-associated improvements in physical function reported by subjects with no blood loss were not evident in those with significant blood loss. Differences between groups were statistically and clinically meaningful, and more pronounced when baseline hemoglobin levels were ≤14 g/dL for females and ≤15 g/dL for males. Use of medications with lower incidence of significant blood loss should be warranted in patients with arthritis.

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