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Reduced cognitive ability in people with rheumatoid arthritis compared with age-matched healthy controls

Reduced cognitive ability in people with rheumatoid arthritis compared with age-matched healthy controls
Reduced cognitive ability in people with rheumatoid arthritis compared with age-matched healthy controls

Objective: the aim was to compare the cognitive ability of people with RA with healthy controls (HCs).

Methods: people with RA were recruited from the Norfolk Arthritis Register (NOAR), a population-based cohort study of people with inflammatory arthritis. Data on aged-matched HCs (people with no cognitive impairment) came from the comparison arm of The Dementia Research and Care Clinic Study (TRACC). People with RA and HCs performed a range of cognitive ability tasks to assess attention, memory, verbal fluency, language, visuospatial skills, emotional recognition, executive function and theory of mind. A score of <88 on the Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination III was considered cognitive impairment. Scores were compared using linear regression adjusting for age, sex, smoking status, education, BMI, anxiety and depression.

Results: thirty-eight people with RA [mean (S.D.) age: 69.1 (8.0) years; 25 (65.8%) women] were matched with 28 HCs [mean (S.D.) age: 68.2 (6.4) years; 15 (53.6%) women]. Twenty-three (60.5%) people with RA were considered to have mild cognitive impairment [mean (S.D.) Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination III: RA = 85.2 (7.4), HC = 96.0 (2.5)]. People with RA had impairments in memory, verbal fluency, visuospatial functioning, executive function and emotional recognition in faces compared with HCs, after adjustment for confounders.

Conclusion: people with RA had cognitive impairments in a range of domains. People with RA might benefit from cognitive impairment screening to allow for early administration of appropriate interventions.

Gwinnutt, James M.
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Toyoda, Task
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Jeffs, Stephen
db31010c-994b-4f95-8185-12be53549ccd
Flanagan, Emma
9f6e2c81-5431-4776-ac06-2b21e3572df6
Chipping, Jacqueline R.
dc0219bc-2509-4bb3-b480-8c8332c2e1e5
Dainty, Jack R.
a0ed8e45-2e80-46da-b9a0-5fd59f34285c
Mioshi, Eneida
7e860c34-19cd-468a-9fee-5fe8c5d071fe
Hornberger, Michael
a48c1c63-422a-4c11-9a51-c7be0aa3026d
MacGregor, Alex
6a6eb75d-fde6-48dd-82b4-fc7b8a747c1b
Gwinnutt, James M.
a3eb718a-3353-42ca-822b-44cb2d72eb07
Toyoda, Task
53e5d636-bdba-4146-b6ff-aaeb54c9bb02
Jeffs, Stephen
db31010c-994b-4f95-8185-12be53549ccd
Flanagan, Emma
9f6e2c81-5431-4776-ac06-2b21e3572df6
Chipping, Jacqueline R.
dc0219bc-2509-4bb3-b480-8c8332c2e1e5
Dainty, Jack R.
a0ed8e45-2e80-46da-b9a0-5fd59f34285c
Mioshi, Eneida
7e860c34-19cd-468a-9fee-5fe8c5d071fe
Hornberger, Michael
a48c1c63-422a-4c11-9a51-c7be0aa3026d
MacGregor, Alex
6a6eb75d-fde6-48dd-82b4-fc7b8a747c1b

Gwinnutt, James M., Toyoda, Task, Jeffs, Stephen, Flanagan, Emma, Chipping, Jacqueline R., Dainty, Jack R., Mioshi, Eneida, Hornberger, Michael and MacGregor, Alex (2021) Reduced cognitive ability in people with rheumatoid arthritis compared with age-matched healthy controls. Rheumatology Advances in Practice, 5 (2), [rkab044]. (doi:10.1093/rap/rkab044).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: the aim was to compare the cognitive ability of people with RA with healthy controls (HCs).

Methods: people with RA were recruited from the Norfolk Arthritis Register (NOAR), a population-based cohort study of people with inflammatory arthritis. Data on aged-matched HCs (people with no cognitive impairment) came from the comparison arm of The Dementia Research and Care Clinic Study (TRACC). People with RA and HCs performed a range of cognitive ability tasks to assess attention, memory, verbal fluency, language, visuospatial skills, emotional recognition, executive function and theory of mind. A score of <88 on the Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination III was considered cognitive impairment. Scores were compared using linear regression adjusting for age, sex, smoking status, education, BMI, anxiety and depression.

Results: thirty-eight people with RA [mean (S.D.) age: 69.1 (8.0) years; 25 (65.8%) women] were matched with 28 HCs [mean (S.D.) age: 68.2 (6.4) years; 15 (53.6%) women]. Twenty-three (60.5%) people with RA were considered to have mild cognitive impairment [mean (S.D.) Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination III: RA = 85.2 (7.4), HC = 96.0 (2.5)]. People with RA had impairments in memory, verbal fluency, visuospatial functioning, executive function and emotional recognition in faces compared with HCs, after adjustment for confounders.

Conclusion: people with RA had cognitive impairments in a range of domains. People with RA might benefit from cognitive impairment screening to allow for early administration of appropriate interventions.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 21 June 2021
Published date: 27 June 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 506456
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/506456
PURE UUID: 2d57799a-b726-43a0-bf6d-746e2d968dd5
ORCID for Michael Hornberger: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2214-3788

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Date deposited: 07 Nov 2025 17:43
Last modified: 08 Nov 2025 03:19

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Contributors

Author: James M. Gwinnutt
Author: Task Toyoda
Author: Stephen Jeffs
Author: Emma Flanagan
Author: Jacqueline R. Chipping
Author: Jack R. Dainty
Author: Eneida Mioshi
Author: Michael Hornberger ORCID iD
Author: Alex MacGregor

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