Press Release
For more information, visit: http://www.interscience.wiley.com/journal/arthritis
Amy Molnar
(201) 748-8844/8852 (fax)
E-mail:
New Evidence to Support Combination Therapy as Optimal Course for Achieving Remission of Early Rheumatoid Arthritis
2-Year Study of Patients with Early, Aggressive Disease Demonstrates
Significantly Superior Results of Anti-TNF Plus DMARD Therapy Over Either
Therapy Alone
A chronic and potentially crippling inflammatory disorder, rheumatoid arthritis
(RA) progressively wears away the cartilage and bone. Joint erosions are routinely
seen within 6 months of RA's onset, and occur more rapidly earlier in the course
of the disease. Moderate disability within 2 years of diagnosis is not uncommon.
While conventional DMARD (disease-modifying antirheumatic drug) therapies have
been shown to slow joint destruction, they are powerless to stop RA's progression
or reverse joint damage.
As researchers widely agree, early intervention offers RA patients the most
promise for preventing irreversible joint damage and avoiding severe disability.
In addition to early treatment, combination treatment, with DMARDs as well
as with biologic agents, has been shown to yield more favorable outcomes than
a single treatment. The January 2006 issue of Arthritis & Rheumatism ( http://www.interscience.wiley.com/journal/arthritis)
presents the first study to compare the effectiveness of DMARD therapy alone,
anti-TNF (tumor necrosis factor) therapy alone, and a combination of DMARD
and anti-TNF therapy. The compelling results affirm the long-term benefits
of early combination therapy for women and men afflicted with aggressive RA.
The study was sponsored by Abbott Laboratories and conducted at 133 sites
throughout North America, Europe, and Australia. It focused on patients with
active RA for less than 3 years who had never been treated with the DMARD methotrexate
(MTX). A total of 799 patients were enrolled in the study. The majority were
women. The mean age was 52 years. 57 percent of the participants had RA for
6 months or less. The subjects were randomly divided into one of 3 treatment
groups: MTX, in pill form, starting with 20 milligrams weekly; the anti-TNF
adalimumab, administered by injection, starting with 40 milligrams every other
week; and a combination of adalimumab plus MTX, starting at the same dosage
levels as the single treatment groups. For all groups, treatment effectiveness
was thoroughly evaluated after 6 months, 1 year, and 2 years. 539 of the participants
completed 2 years of their assigned treatment.
In all outcome measured, the combination of treatments was clinically and
statistically superior to both adalimumab and MTX alone. Following 1 year of
treatment, 62 percent of patients in the combination therapy group had 50 percent
improvement in disease symptoms, according to the standard American College
of Rheumatology criteria, compared with 41 percent of patients in the adalimumab
only group and 46 percent of patients in the MTX only group. In addition, there
was significantly less radiographic disease progression at 6 months, 1 year,
and 2 years among patients in the combination treatment group than among those
in either single treatment group. What's more, after 2 years of treatment,
nearly half the patients in the combination therapy group exhibited a major
clinical remission, rates approximately twice those found among patients receiving
either single therapy.
The combination of DMARD and anti-TFN therapy proved safe and well tolerated
by patients. The incidence of infections and other adverse events were low
and comparable in all 3 treatment groups. What's more, increasing the dosages
of either adalimumab or MTX alone failed to yield the improvements experienced
by patients receiving both treatments in relatively low dosages.
As spokesperson George T. Spencer-Green points out, the study's participants
had an unusually high level of radiographic damage present at baseline for
their average disease duration of under one year. Early RA patients with milder
forms of the disease may benefit from early DMARD therapy under a clinician's
supervision. “For the patient with early, aggressive and erosive, RA,” he notes, “treatment
with combination therapy is superior to treatment with MTX alone.”
# # #
Article : “The PREMIER Study: A Multicenter, Randomized, Double-Blind Clinical
Trial of Combination Therapy With Adalimumab Plus Methotrexate Versus Methotrexate
Alone or Adalimumab Alone in Patients with Early, Aggressive Rheumatoid Arthritis
Who Had Not Had Previous Methotrexate Treatment,” Ferdinand C. Breedveld, Michael
H. Weisman, Arthur F. Kavanaugh, Stanley B. Cohen, Karel Pavelka, Ronald von
Vollenhoven, John Sharp, John L. Perez, George T. Spencer-Green, for the PREMIER
investigators, Arthritis & Rheumatism , January 2006, 54:1, pp.
41-52.