Терапевтический архив (May 2014)
Cardiovascular diseases in patients with rheumatoid arthritis during long-term methotrexate therapy
Abstract
AIM: To compare the prevalence of risk factors, clinical and subclinical manifestations of cardiovascular diseases (CVD) and their complications in methotrexate (MT)-treated and untreated patients with rheumatoid arthritis/MATERIAL AND METHODS: The investigation enrolled 193 patients (168 women and 25 men) less than 60 years of age (mean age 49 [44; 53] years) with RA. The patients were divided into 2 groups: 1) 69 patients who received MT in a dose of 15.1 [10.2; 21] mg/week for at least 12 months (mean disease duration 25 [18; 48] months); 2) 124 patients who did not take MT. The patient groups were matched for age, gender, disease duration, RA activity, and the rate of rheumatoid factor (RF) seropositivity and extraarticular manifestations/RESULTS: Dyslipidemia was significantly less frequently identified in MT-treated patients (35/69 or 51%) than in MT-untreated ones (85/124 or 69%; p=0.01). The serum from the patients treated with MT exhibited higher high-density lipoprotein cholesterol concentrations ((1.8 [0.9; 2.0] mmol/l) than in those untreated with MT (1.2 [1.0; 1.6] mmol/l; р=0,047). In Group 1, hypertension (49%) and diabetes mellitus (3%) were slightly rare than in Group 2 (62 and 13%, respectively; p>0.05). Carotid atherosclerotic plaques were found in 19 and 16% and intima-media thickness (IMT) enlargement was seen in 53 and 56% of the patients in Groups 1 and 2, respectively. Silent myocardial ischemia was diagnosed in every 10 patients; heart disease (exertional angina, myocardial infarction) was in every 5 patients in both groups. Aortocoronary bypass surgery was performed in 2 (3%) patients from those who received MT and had experienced MI and in one (1.6%) patient from the MT-untreated group/CONCLUSION: Long-term MT therapy was associated with the lower rate of dyslipidemia, but it failed to affect the incidence of CVD in patients with RA.