Investigación de SAA
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SAA’s Global COVID-19 Spondyloarthritis Patient Registry

This study used data from an online survey to access common concerns of Spondyloarthritis including ankylosing spondylitis and COVID-19.

Many patients are concerned with anti-inflammatory medication (e.g., anti-TNF, anti-IL-17, NSAIDs, sulfasalazine, etc.) and increased susceptibility to COVID-19 infection. Data collected from over 4300 patients revealed that anti-inflammatory medication did not increase the risk of COVID-19 infection.

Another concern was HLA-B27 status and increased susceptibility or severity of COVID-19 infection. Data collected from over 3400 patients showed neither an increased risk nor protective effect against COVID-19. The same data also revealed B27 status did not affect COVID-19 symptom severity.

This study also revealed that HLA-B27 status was negatively associated with axial spondyloarthritis (AxSpA) symptom severity. Plainly, AxSpA patients without HLA-B27 reported more severe disease than HLA-B27 positive patients. This reporting is opposite to the relation with HLA-B27 and ankylosing spondylitis (AS). Further, HLA-B27 is associated with lower disease activity in AxSpA and higher disease activity in AS.

Research team included: Dr. James T. Rosenbaum (Principle Investigator), Dr. John D. Reveille, Dr. Michael H. Weisman, Dr. Kevin L. Winthrop, Dr. Kimberly Ogle, Dongseok Choi, Hedley Hamilton of Any-3, Cassie Shafer, Elin Aslanyan, and Richard A. Howard. Plain language summary by Dr. Joseph Stenberg.

Results

Microbiome Produced Indole in the Expansion of ILC3s in SpA

This study addresses why the microbiome is important in the development of spondylitis.

While microbiome studies identify differences in specific bacteria, a common bacterium has yet to emerge as a pathogenic factor in SpA. Focusing on the differences in how the microbiome as a whole functions, Dr. Kuhn’s research group has identified a link to the way dietary tryptophan is broken-down into inflammatory chemicals by the microbiome of individuals with SpA. Her group is evaluating how these inflammatory chemicals derived from tryptophan influence immune functions that lead to arthritis.

This study combines translational observations from a study population of people with AS with mechanistic wet-bench studies aiming to address the immunologic consequences of microbiome changes in patients with SpA. The study provides an important foundation to address why the microbiome is important in the development of SpA.

Manuscript

Incidence of and Risk Factors for Spondyloarthropathies among Active-Duty U.S. Army Soldiers

SpA represents a potential, silent cause of back pain among some who serve. Unfortunately, research on SpA among military service members has been minimal, and researchers found no data on the incidence of this disease or its risk factors in the US military prior to their study. This is a glaring information deficit in light of the impact of back problems on military disability. Gaining a better understanding of the rates and predictors of SpA and its associated functional outcomes in military populations could be important due to the exposures associated with military service.

Doctors Lianne Kurina, Michael Weisman, Alan Nelson, and Robert Kaplan found that in strong contrast to prior studies and conventional wisdom about a male predominance in SpA, researchers found that adjusted odds of SpA were very similar in men compared to women in this active, regularly-screened population with universal health care. 

Abstracts & Articles

SAA’s Life Impact Survey III

Dr. Rosenbaum’s research assessed the impact of ankylosing spondylitis (AS) on quality of life across physical, discomfort, social, and emotional domains. This study surveyed 716 patients suffering from AS in the United States. Research revealed that sex differences showed a greater impact of AS on quality of life in women versus men, with the most significant impact in the physical domain. This study identifies the impaired quality of life aspects for future improvements in AS treatment. Prior Life Impact Studies were conducted in 2002 & 2011. Plain language summary by Joseph Stenberg. 

Results

SAA’s Unmet Needs Conference III

For two days in September of 2017, the Spondylitis Association of America brought together an international group of leading researchers to the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in Bethesda, Maryland, to identify pressing gaps, share insights, discuss scientific and treatment issues, and provide direction for the next decade of spondyloarthritis research. The Spondylitis Association of America and the National Institute of Arthritis, Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases

(NIAMS) "Spondyloarthritis 2017: Unmet Needs Conference III" generated interdisciplinary collaborations among researchers and clinicians, and opened new areas of investigation to expand the breadth and depth of spondyloarthritis research. The 2017 gathering builds on SAA's inaugural Unmet Needs conference held in 1998, and Unmet Needs II in 2006. By physically bringing the top researchers in the country to network and discuss cutting edge research in other diseases, the conference laid the groundwork for the next several years of research and investigation into spondyloarthritis.

 

Supporting Documents

Does the Microbiome Cause Ankylosing Spondylitis?

SAA Medical Board Member James Rosenbaum, MD, posed this question in SAA's news magazine, Spondylitis Plus. Since that article was published, SAA has assisted in funding his research to test his hypothesis.

Abstracts

Prevalence of AS & Online Screening Tool in the USA

The concept of inflammatory back pain (IBP) evolved in the 1970s, coincident with the discovery of the HLA-B27 association with ankylosing spondylitis (AS), leading to the development of criteria to determine the presence of IBP. The concept of IBP and it relationship with AS and axial spondyloarthritis (AxSpA) has further evolved, and an instrument developed (the Spondylitis Association of America Back Pain Tool), which was further modified and field tested for use in the 2009-2010 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). This has shown the frequency of chronic back pain to have risen to 19.4%, with nearly one-third having IBP. The prevalence of AxSpA has been defined at 1.0-1.4% and AS at 0.52-0.55%. The national prevalence of HLA-B27 in the U.S. is 6.1%, and intriguing data from NHANES 2009 suggest a decreasing frequency with increasing age. From this arise new questions and a work agenda ahead.

Genetic and Environmental Influence on SpA Diseases

Dr. Lianne Gensler is a rheumatologist at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) Medical Center and the Director of the Ankylosing Spondylitis Clinic. Dr. Gensler, Dr. Matt Stoll and Dr. Matt Brown were selected to receive funding for their MOSAS research study.

Multiple genetic and environmental factors result in the development of SpA diseases, including ankylosing spondylitis. In this study, Dr. Gensler et.al will evaluate children at increased risk of developing spondylitis based upon a family history of AS and positive HLA-B27 marker, comparing them to their HLA-B27 negative, and thus lower-risk siblings as well as to their disease-free parent. This will be the first study of its kind to evaluate the pre-disease microbiota in patients with a higher likelihood of developing arthritis.

Fungus/Yeast in the Pathogenesis of SpA

Drs. Mark Asquith and James Rosenbaum’s research focuses on the potential role for fungus or yeast in the pathogenesis of spondyloarthritis. Microbiota is the community of micro-organisms that inhabit the interior and exterior of the human body at various tissue sites. Drs. Asquith and Rosenbaum’s research utilizes fungal microbiota to investigate a novel therapeutic strategy to reduce or prevent disease symptoms in AS patients. 

Treatment Guidelines

Recommendations for the Management of Axial Spondyloarthritis

The American College of Rheumatology (ACR) has released new recommendations for the treatment of ankylosing spondylitis (AS) and non-radiographic axial spondyloarthritis (SpA). The guideline was developed with the Spondylitis Association of America (SAA) and the Spondyloarthritis Research and Treatment Network. It summarizes recommendations for both pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic treatments, including rehabilitation, management of patients with comorbid conditions, use of certain surgeries, and approaches to patient monitoring.

National Patient Registry on Ankylosing Spondylitis

SAA has seeded a national patient registry on ankylosing spondylitis. By combining three existing patient databases that have been used in research, the composite database can look at thousands and potentially tens of thousands of patients and be able to track health trends, disease severity over time, age, gender, race, and many other factors to improve understanding of the disease.

SAA's Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) Workshop in Spondyloarthritis

Molecular Basis for the Association of HLA-B27 and Ankylosing Spondylitis

The goal of Dr. Taurog's research has been to understand the molecular basis for the association of the rheumatic disease called ankylosing spondylitis with the major histocompatibility allele HLA-B27. This MHC class I allele is found in 7 percent of the U.S. population, but in over 90 percent of individuals with ankylosing spondylitis. Of individuals with B27, it is estimated that up to 13 percent will develop ankylosing spondylitis or a related form of spondyloarthritis.