Prevalence and distribution of peripheral musculoskeletal manifestations in spondyloarthritis including psoriatic arthritis: results of the worldwide, cross-sectional ASAS-PerSpA study.

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Author
Lopez-Medina, Clementina
Molto, Anna
Sieper, Joachim
Duruöz, Tuncay
Kiltz, Uta
ElZorkany, Bassel
Hajjaj-Hssouni, Najia
Burgos-Vargas, Ruben
Maldonado-Cocco, José
Ziade, Nelly
Gavali, Meghna
Navarro-Compan, Victoria
Luo, Shue-Fen
Monti, Sara
Tae-Jong, Kim
Kishimoto, Mitsumasa
Pimentel-Santos, Fernando
Gu, Jieruo
Schiotis, Ruxandra
van Gaalen, Floris
Geher, Pal
Magrey, Marina
Ibañez, Sebastian
Bautista-Molano, Wilson
Walter, Maksymowych
Machado, Pedro M
Landewé, Robert
van der Heijde, Desirée
Dougados, Maxime
Publisher
BMJ Publishing GroupDate
2021-01Subject
Espondiloartritis, manifestaciones periféricasMETS:
Mostrar el registro METSPREMIS:
Mostrar el registro PREMISMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Objectives: To characterise peripheral musculoskeletal involvement in patients with spondyloarthritis (SpA) including psoriatic arthritis (PsA), across the world.
Methods: Cross-sectional study with 24 participating countries. Patients with a diagnosis of axial SpA (axSpA), peripheral SpA (pSpA) or PsA according to their rheumatologist were included. The investigators were asked which diagnosis out of a list of six (axSpA, PsA, pSpA, inflammatory bowel disease-associated SpA, reactive arthritis or juvenile SpA (Juv-SpA)) fitted the patient best. Peripheral manifestations (ie, peripheral joint disease, enthesitis, dactylitis and root joint disease), their localisation and treatments were evaluated.
Results: A total of 4465 patients were included (61% men, mean age 44.5 years) from four geographic areas: Latin America (n=538), Europe plus North America (n=1677), Asia (n=975) and the Middle East plus North Africa (n=1275). Of those, 78% had ever suffered from at least one peripheral musculoskeletal manifestation; 57% had peripheral joint disease, 44% had enthesitis and 15% had dactylitis. Latin American had far more often peripheral joint disease (80%) than patients from other areas. Patients with PsA had predominantly upper limb and small joint involvement (52%).Hip and shoulder involvement was found in 34% of patients. The prevalence of enthesitis ranged between 41% in patients with axSpA and 65% in patients with Juv-SpA. Dactylitis was most frequent among patients with PsA (37%).
Conclusion: These results suggest that all peripheral features can be found in all subtypes of SpA, and that differences are quantitative rather than qualitative. In a high proportion of patients, axial and peripheral manifestations coincided. These findings reconfirm SpA clinical subtypes are descendants of the same underlying disease, called SpA.