AbstractsBiology & Animal Science

Investigation of atherosclerosis and the effects of anti- inflammatory therapy on plaque morphology in rheumatoid arthritis

by Sarah Skeoch




Institution: University of Manchester
Department:
Year: 2015
Keywords: rheumatoid arthritis; atherosclerosis
Record ID: 1394300
Full text PDF: http://www.manchester.ac.uk/escholar/uk-ac-man-scw:259355


Abstract

IntroductionRheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a systemic autoimmune condition, characterised by an inflammatory arthritis. It is associated with a 50% increased risk of cardiovascular (CV) mortality. Chronic inflammation is thought to lead to accelerated atherosclerosis in RA. There is some evidence to suggest that patients have a more inflammatory, unstable atherosclerotic plaque phenotype. The impact of advances in RA treatment, on cardiovascular co-morbidity remains unclear. The aims of the current study were to employ non-invasive imaging techniques to test the hypothesis that RA patients have more inflammatory, unstable atherosclerotic plaques compared to unaffected individuals and that treatment of active arthritis would lead to alterations in plaque composition and inflammation. Secondary aims were to evaluate the association of clinical phenotype and potential serological biomarkers of CV risk with plaque presence and phenotype.MethodsA prospective pilot study of patients with active RA and age and sex matched controls was conducted. Subjects underwent clinical and serological evaluation, then carotid artery ultrasound was performed to screen for carotid plaque. Dynamic contrast enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI) was performed on those with suitable plaque. A subgroup of patients had a carotid artery positron emission tomography (PET) scan. Patients were followed up with repeat clinical, serological and DCE-MRI assessments. The primary outcome evaluated was difference in plaque inflammation measured on DCE-MRI between patients and controls and in patients longitudinally. Secondary outcomes included differences in plaque composition on DCE-MRI, plaque inflammation on PET and the relationship of clinical, serological and imaging findings.Results130 patients and 52 controls were recruited and screened for carotid plaque. There was a higher prevalence of plaque on ultrasound in the patient group (53% vs 36%) and plaque was independently associated with high sensitivity c reactive protein (hsCRP). Carotid DCE- MRI data was analysed in 15 patients and 5 controls. There was no significant difference in plaque inflammation on DCE-MRI between the groups. However there was a significantly higher rate of plaque calcification in patients, despite similar plaque burden in both groups (73.3% vs 20%, p=0.038). All 15 patients exhibited features of high-risk plaque. Plaque inflammation was seen in all 13 patients in whom PET imaging was undertaken. No significant improvement in plaque inflammation was detected on DCE-MRI over time, which was in keeping with the lack of clinical improvement found in most cases. ConclusionsIncreased prevalence of atherosclerosis and differences in plaque phenotype were observed in this study and findings would support the hypothesis that patients have a more high-risk plaque phenotype. The high prevalence of calcified lesions in RA is a novel finding which warrants further investigation. The study was underpowered to detect significant changes in plaque inflammation, measured on DCE-MRI,…