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The RESIST study: examining cognitive change in rheumatoid arthritis patients with mild cognitive impairment being treated with a TNF-inhibitor compared to a conventional synthetic disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drug

The RESIST study: examining cognitive change in rheumatoid arthritis patients with mild cognitive impairment being treated with a TNF-inhibitor compared to a conventional synthetic disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drug
The RESIST study: examining cognitive change in rheumatoid arthritis patients with mild cognitive impairment being treated with a TNF-inhibitor compared to a conventional synthetic disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drug
Background: evidence suggests that TNF inhibitors (TNFi) used to treat rheumatoid arthritis (RA) may protect against Alzheimer’s disease progression by reducing inflammation.

Objective: to investigate whether RA patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) being treated with a TNFi show slower cognitive decline than those being treated with a conventional synthetic disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drug (csDMARD).

Methods: 251 participants with RA and MCI taking either a csDMARD (N = 157) or a TNFi (N = 94) completed cognitive assessments at baseline and 6-month intervals for 18 months. It was hypothesized that those taking TNFis would show less decline on the primary outcome of Free and Cued Selective Reminding Test with Immediate Recall (FCSRT-IR) and the secondary outcome of Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA).

Results: no significant changes in FCSRT-IR scores were observed in either treatment group. There was no significant difference in FCSRT-IR between treatment groups at 18 months after adjusting for baseline (mean difference = 0.5, 95% CI = –1.3, 2.3). There was also no difference in MoCA score (mean difference = 0.4, 95% CI = –0.4, 1.3).

Conclusions: there was no cognitive decline in participants with MCI being treated with TNFis and csDMARDs, raising the possibility both classes of drug may be protective. Future studies should consider whether controlling inflammatory diseases using any approach is more important than a specific therapeutic intervention.
Alzheimer's disease, inflammation, mild cognitive impairment, rheumatoid arthritis, tumor necrosis factor-alpha
1387-2877
161-175
Marr, Calum
5a9c0ef2-930c-426f-9e4c-758003495d91
McDowell, Bethany
72f44dde-fa5f-4715-aa88-322c0d9be445
Holmes, Clive
bc341b67-bb63-444f-9659-d7e2a0937276
Edwards, Christopher J.
7f4cba86-407a-476a-8826-c43a984ce0ae
Cardwell, Christopher
47c5efdb-fb08-4ee9-b790-e5f12643c818
McHenry, Michell
43391eed-df23-4387-9a75-6545b4ca2089
Meenagh, Gary
fa759561-4574-4740-8302-d46159c8bf46
Teeling, Jessica L.
fcde1c8e-e5f8-4747-9f3a-6bdb5cd87d0a
McGuinness, Bernadette
eb4181cf-35c7-488a-b311-511d18554b7f
Marr, Calum
5a9c0ef2-930c-426f-9e4c-758003495d91
McDowell, Bethany
72f44dde-fa5f-4715-aa88-322c0d9be445
Holmes, Clive
bc341b67-bb63-444f-9659-d7e2a0937276
Edwards, Christopher J.
7f4cba86-407a-476a-8826-c43a984ce0ae
Cardwell, Christopher
47c5efdb-fb08-4ee9-b790-e5f12643c818
McHenry, Michell
43391eed-df23-4387-9a75-6545b4ca2089
Meenagh, Gary
fa759561-4574-4740-8302-d46159c8bf46
Teeling, Jessica L.
fcde1c8e-e5f8-4747-9f3a-6bdb5cd87d0a
McGuinness, Bernadette
eb4181cf-35c7-488a-b311-511d18554b7f

Marr, Calum, McDowell, Bethany, Holmes, Clive, Edwards, Christopher J., Cardwell, Christopher, McHenry, Michell, Meenagh, Gary, Teeling, Jessica L. and McGuinness, Bernadette (2024) The RESIST study: examining cognitive change in rheumatoid arthritis patients with mild cognitive impairment being treated with a TNF-inhibitor compared to a conventional synthetic disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drug. Journal of Alzheimer's Disease, 99 (1), 161-175. (doi:10.3233/JAD-231329).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: evidence suggests that TNF inhibitors (TNFi) used to treat rheumatoid arthritis (RA) may protect against Alzheimer’s disease progression by reducing inflammation.

Objective: to investigate whether RA patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) being treated with a TNFi show slower cognitive decline than those being treated with a conventional synthetic disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drug (csDMARD).

Methods: 251 participants with RA and MCI taking either a csDMARD (N = 157) or a TNFi (N = 94) completed cognitive assessments at baseline and 6-month intervals for 18 months. It was hypothesized that those taking TNFis would show less decline on the primary outcome of Free and Cued Selective Reminding Test with Immediate Recall (FCSRT-IR) and the secondary outcome of Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA).

Results: no significant changes in FCSRT-IR scores were observed in either treatment group. There was no significant difference in FCSRT-IR between treatment groups at 18 months after adjusting for baseline (mean difference = 0.5, 95% CI = –1.3, 2.3). There was also no difference in MoCA score (mean difference = 0.4, 95% CI = –0.4, 1.3).

Conclusions: there was no cognitive decline in participants with MCI being treated with TNFis and csDMARDs, raising the possibility both classes of drug may be protective. Future studies should consider whether controlling inflammatory diseases using any approach is more important than a specific therapeutic intervention.

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RESIST manuscript JAD April 2024 - Accepted Manuscript
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Supplementary Material JAD April 2024
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 28 February 2024
Published date: 30 April 2024
Keywords: Alzheimer's disease, inflammation, mild cognitive impairment, rheumatoid arthritis, tumor necrosis factor-alpha

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 491509
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/491509
ISSN: 1387-2877
PURE UUID: b2110b5f-63cd-4554-b19d-7cc9f0ad6081
ORCID for Jessica L. Teeling: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4004-7391

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Date deposited: 25 Jun 2024 16:50
Last modified: 12 Nov 2024 02:41

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Contributors

Author: Calum Marr
Author: Bethany McDowell
Author: Clive Holmes
Author: Christopher J. Edwards
Author: Christopher Cardwell
Author: Michell McHenry
Author: Gary Meenagh
Author: Bernadette McGuinness

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