Objective: To assess the possible clinical and biological rescue of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in 16 patients who were still active despite intensive combination therapy after receiving infliximab following the Anti-Tumour necrosis factor Trial in Rheumatoid Arthritis with Concomitant Therapy (ATTRACT) schedule.
Methods: Sixteen patients who were still active despite combination therapy with optimal doses of methotrexate (MTX 15-17.5 mg/week) and cyclosporin A (CsA 2.5-3.5 mg/day) received infliximab. Ten received their combination plus infliximab (Combi), and six received infliximab plus MTX alone (Mono). The follow-up was carried out for 30 weeks in all patients and for 46 weeks in eight. Efficacy and safety were examined.
Results: At entry, the mean disease activity score (DAS) was 5.6 (all patients had a DAS >3.7). After therapy, eight of 10 patients in Combi and four out of six in Mono showed an improvement of >50% in the initial swollen joint count, yet only one patient reached 50% improvement in the initial DAS after 30 weeks, and one patient had a DAS <2.4 (low disease activity). Of the eight patients who reached 46 weeks of follow-up, three showed an improvement in DAS of 50% and two had a DAS <2.4. When considering the change over time, the difference between DAS at entry and at week 30 was statistically significant only in patients receiving MTX plus CsA, while it was not significant in those receiving MTX only. Two patients developed recurrent febrile upper respiratory infections in the Combi therapy group, while two had a single febrile infection in the MTX alone group. Two patients became strongly anti-cardiolipin positive (IgM >40 MPL) and one developed a coronary syndrome.
Conclusion: Infliximab can be added incrementally to MTX plus CsA, with favourable results in terms of efficacy and safety over time in severe rapidly aggressive and progressive RA. Finally, minor evidence emerged for a stronger efficacy of the Combi treatment compared with Mono.