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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT07132164

Justification of the Initial Diagnosis and Evaluation of the Overall Evolution of a Cohort of Recent Polymyalgia Rheumatica (JADORE)

Sponsor: University Hospital, Brest

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Pseudo-rheumatoid arthritis (PRA) is a common inflammatory rheumatic disease of the elderly, characterized by inflammatory shoulder and/or hip pain. Its routine diagnosis is based on a number of clinical criteria, the presence of a biological inflammatory syndrome and the elimination of the main differential diagnoses. It is sometimes referred to as PPR syndrome, since around 25% of initial diagnoses are not confirmed at one year's follow-up (PPR syndrome revealing rheumatoid arthritis, microcrystalline rheumatism, etc.). Diagnosis may be facilitated by ultrasound scans of the shoulders and hips, which may show characteristic inflammatory lesions, or by PET scans when there is a marked deterioration in general condition or other clinical atypia. PPR may be associated at the outset, or it may evolve into the rarer vasculitis of the elderly, giant cell arteritis (GCA), a condition that can lead to severe and irreversible neurological vascular damage if not treated early. Prolonged, moderate-dose corticosteroid therapy is the cornerstone of PPR treatment, although new treatments are in the process of obtaining marketing authorization to enable cortisone sparing. Anti-IL-6 agents, and in particular Tocilizumab, have demonstrated their efficacy in recent cortico-dependent PPR, Sarilumab has obtained marketing authorization for cortico-dependent PPR in the USA in 2023, and other therapeutic classes are currently being evaluated in this situation. Recommendations, including those of ACR/EULAR in 2015, advise a strategy of initiating corticosteroid therapy at a moderate dose, with a dosage of between 12.5 and 25 mg prednisone equivalent per day, and gradually tapering off with the aim of reaching a dosage of 10 mg prednisone equivalent per day at week 8, to achieve complete weaning at 12 months. However, on the one hand, these recommendations are not based on clinical trials and, on the other, the main comorbidities associated with PPR are related to this long-term corticosteroid therapy. Lastly, we know that around 50% of patients do not follow this tapering-off protocol, with either relapses (estimated at 50% during tapering) or the impossibility for around 25% of patients to stop corticosteroid therapy. However, there are currently no predictive factors for the evolution of PPR. PPR activity can be measured either using a validated score, the DAS-PPR, or according to the opinion of the rheumatologist. Good progression of rheumatoid arthritis is characterized by a low activity score (DAS-PPR\<10) and, wherever possible, discontinuation of treatment within one year, as recommended by international experts. The main objective of this cohort is therefore to evaluate the percentage of patients with low-activity PPR (DAS-PPR\<10) and no treatment at 12 months. Secondary objectives will concern the initial phenotypic and evolutionary description of PPR (complete initial phenotypic characteristics, including some exploratory ones (imaging, biology, immunology, genetics, microbiota, avatars). The evolution of the disease, with the percentage of relapses during the decline or distant relapses, percentage of association with ACG, mortality rate, as well as the prognostic factors of these different evolutionary forms. A description of the disease-modifying treatments used (corticosteroid therapy and its decline, other immunomodulators), as well as a record of the complications presented by patients (development of ACG, corticosteroid toxicity, sarcopenia, osteoporosis fractures, diverticular perforation). Finally, many pathologies can clinically and biologically mimic PPR, leading to erroneous prescriptions of glucocorticoids for prolonged periods, and sometimes a delay in the diagnosis of serious conditions. These classic differential diagnoses will be investigated according to the clinical context and the clinician's judgement, and the diagnostic value of tests such as joint ultrasound, PET scans and biomarkers can be assessed. With regard to patient follow-up, if an alternative diagnosis is identified immediately after the completion of additional examinations, the patient is no longer followed up in the study, and the alternative diagnosis is noted by the investigator. For patients for whom the investigator's conviction concerning the diagnosis of PPR remains above 50%, as at inclusion, follow-up in the study is continued. At one year's follow-up, if an alternative diagnosis has been made, this is collected and the patient is no longer followed up in the cohort. Follow-up for other patients then continues for 5 years. Deterministic matching to the SNDS will be performed for each patient included. To date, there is no French prospective cohort dedicated to the follow-up of patients with a recent form of PPR, as has been done for rheumatoid arthritis, spondyloarthritis and psoriatic arthritis. The creation of such a cohort will improve our knowledge of this pathology, in terms of both pathophysiology and routine management.

Official title: Justification of the Initial Diagnosis and Evaluation of the Overall Evolution of a Cohort of Recent Polymyalgia Rheumatica

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

50 Years - Any

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

400

Start Date

2025-10-01

Completion Date

2034-10-01

Last Updated

2025-08-20

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

OTHER

biobank sample collection

At inclusion, patients will benefit from blood testing for biobank establishment, and stool sample collection for gut microbiota analysis will be organized depending on the center. The 12-month visit (M12) will also include an additional blood sample collection as part of the biobank, as well as stool sample collection

Locations (30)

CHU Rouen

Rouen, Rouen, France

Besançon-CIC

Besançon, France

CHU Besançon

Besançon, France

CHU de Bordeaux Pellegrin

Bordeaux, France

CH Boulogne/mer

Boulogne-sur-Mer, France

CHU de Brest

Brest, France

CHU de Caen

Caen, France

Clinique de l'Infirmerie Protestante de Lyon

Caluire-et-Cuire, France

CHU de Clermont-Ferrand

Clermont-Ferrand, France

CH Dax

Dax, France

CHU de Dijon

Dijon, France

CH La Roche s/ Yon

La Roche-sur-Yon, France

APHP - Kremlin-Bicêtre

Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, France

CH Le Mans

Le Mans, France

CHU de Lille

Lille, France

Institut catholique de Lille

Lomme, France

CHU Marseille AP-HM

Marseille, France

CH Le Havre

Montivilliers, France

CHU de Montpellier

Montpellier, France

CH Morlaix

Morlaix, France

CHU de Nice

Nice, France

AP-HP La Pitié-Salpétrière

Paris, France

AP-HP Cochin

Paris, France

AP-HP Bichat

Paris, France

Hopital NOVO - Site Pontoise

Pontoise, France

CHU Saint-Etienne

Saint-Priest-en-Jarez, France

CHU Strasbourg

Strasbourg, France

Clinique Ambroise Paré-Toulouse

Toulouse, France

CHU de Toulouse

Toulouse, France

CHU de Tours

Tours, France