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Prevalence and predictors of long-term remission in rheumatoid arthritis in real-world practice: a longitudinal study.

Alireza KhabbaziLeyla GadakchiMohammadreza MoslemiAmirreza KhalajiKamal EsalatmaneshAsma Ziarati YazdeliMehrzad HajialiloAida Malek Mahdavi
Published in: Clinical rheumatology (2023)
In real-world practice, long-term remission occurs in 31.5% of patients treated with a tight control strategy. Absence of flare during the course of disease, occurrence of sustained remission during 6 months after starting therapy, age at the disease onset > 60, being ACPA negative, and DAS28 at baseline ≤ 5.1 are independent predictors of long-term remission. Key Points • In real-world practice, long-term remission occurs in 31.5% of patients treated with a tight control strategy. • Median time to long-term remission was 8 months. • Absence of flare during the course of disease, occurrence of sustained remission during 6 months after starting therapy, age at the disease onset >60, being ACPA negative, and DAS28 at baseline ≤ 5.1 are independent predictors of long-term remission.
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