Scientific Reports (Nov 2023)

The assessment of atlantoaxial joint involvement in patients with rheumatoid arthritis, results from an observational “real-life” study

  • Claudia Di Muzio,
  • Alessandro Conforti,
  • Federico Bruno,
  • Damiano Currado,
  • Onorina Berardicurti,
  • Luca Navarini,
  • Viktoriya Pavlych,
  • Ilenia Di Cola,
  • Alice Biaggi,
  • Stefano Di Donato,
  • Annalisa Marino,
  • Sebastiano Lorusso,
  • Francesco Ursini,
  • Antonio Barile,
  • Carlo Masciocchi,
  • Paola Cipriani,
  • Roberto Giacomelli,
  • Piero Ruscitti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-46069-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Atlantoaxial joint is a possible affected site during rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and, in this work, we evaluated its occurrence and associated characteristics in a “real-life” cohort. By a medical records review study of RA patients longitudinally followed-up, the occurrence of severe atlantoaxial joint involvement was estimated (incidence proportion and incidence rate per 1000 person-years at risk). Regression analyses were also exploited to evaluate possible associated factors. Based on these findings, a prospective recruitment was performed to build a descriptive cross-sectional study in evaluating a subclinical atlantoaxial joint involvement in patients with the same clinical characteristics. Retrospectively, 717 patients (female 56.6%, age 64.7 ± 12.3 years) were studied. The incidence proportion of severe atlantoaxial joint involvement was 2.1% [1.5–2.5], occurring in 15 out of 717 patients, and identified by both MRI and CT scan. Considering over 3091 person-years, an incidence rate of 5.2 × 1000 [2.9–8.3] person-years was estimated. Regression analyses suggested that male gender, a longer disease duration, ACPA positivity and extra-articular manifestations resulted to be significantly associated with a severe atlantoaxial joint involvement. Given these findings, 30 asymptomatic patients were selected according to these clinical characteristics and underwent MRI of cervical spine. To date, almost 50% of these asymptomatic patients showed a subclinical atlantoaxial joint involvement. The occurrence of the severe atlantoaxial joint involvement in RA patients was estimated in a “real-life” setting. Male gender, ACPA positivity, long disease duration, and extra-articular manifestations could be associated with the severe atlantoaxial joint involvement in RA. MRI could provide a useful clinical tool to early evaluate the atlantoaxial joint involvement in RA, also in asymptomatic patients.