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Showing papers by "James F. Fries published in 1986"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is indicated that rheumatoid arthritis, a chronic disabling disease, is also associated with a major decrease in survivorship, and treatment with gold or prednisone did not seem to affect survivorship or cause of death.
Abstract: The factors associated with mortality were examined in a prospective longitudinal study, over an average of 12 years, with 94% followup of patients diagnosed as having rheumatoid arthritis. Of 805 patients, 233 died during the period of the study. Survivorship of rheumatoid arthritis patients was approximately 50% less than that of population controls. Survivorship was decreased by the traditional demographic variables of greater age and male sex; however, a significant independent effect of variables reflecting disease severity (American Rheumatism Association functional class, rheumatoid factor titer, number of involved joints) was identified by multivariate analysis. Seventy-nine excess deaths (i.e., those that would not have been expected in a control population) were due in part to disease-related causes, to infections, and to gastrointestinal complications of therapy. Treatment with gold or prednisone did not seem to affect survivorship or cause of death, except for the clustering of deaths of patients with vasculitis within the prednisone group. Our findings indicate that rheumatoid arthritis, a chronic disabling disease, is also associated with a major decrease in survivorship.

445 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Criteria for the classification of juvenile rheumatoid arthritis were analyzed in a detailed database of 250 children in order to assess the accuracy of diagnosis and validity of onset types and course subtypes.
Abstract: Criteria for the classification of juvenile rheumatoid arthritis were analyzed in a detailed database of 250 children in order to assess the accuracy of diagnosis and validity of onset types and course subtypes. A number of conclusions have been derived from this study: All definitions of the 1973 criteria for classification of juvenile rheumatoid arthritis should be retained. The addition of onset types to the 1976 revision of the criteria has been validated. The course of the disease after the onset period of 6 months is as important to the outcome of a group of children as is the onset type. The current classification should be broadened to include the course subtypes.

420 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
07 Mar 1986-JAMA
TL;DR: Runners, both male and female, have approximately 40% more bone mineral than matched controls, but female runners appear to have somewhat more sclerosis and spur formation in spine and weight-bearing knee x-ray films, but not in hand x-rays.
Abstract: Forty-one long-distance runners aged 50 to 72 years were compared with 41 matched community controls to examine associations of repetitive, long-term physical impact (running) with osteoarthritis and osteoporosis. Roentgenograms of hands, lateral lumbar spine, and knees were assessed without knowledge of running status. A computed tomographic scan of the first lumbar vertebra was performed to quantitate bone mineral content. Runners, both male and female, have approximately 40% more bone mineral than matched controls. Female runners, but not male runners, appear to have somewhat more sclerosis and spur formation in spine and weight-bearing knee x-ray films, but not in hand x-ray films. There were no differences between groups in joint space narrowing, crepitation, joint stability, or symptomatic osteoarthritis. Running is associated with increased bone mineral but not, in this cross-sectional study, with clinical osteoarthritis.

332 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that it is possible to identify, early in the disease course, those patients who are likely to develop severe disability, and that "disease-modifying" therapy might well be initiated earlier in such patients and used consistently throughout the subsequent treatment.
Abstract: Six hundred eighty-one consecutive patients with rheumatoid arthritis were followed for an average of 11.9 years to identify initial factors that predicted subsequent disability. Of 39 potentially predictive variables obtained at study onset and studied by stepwise regression methods, age was found to be the most powerful single predictor of disability, followed by radiologic grade, sex, and initial functional class. The worst prognosis for disability was found in patients who were older women and who showed radiologic worsening and developed functional impairment early in the disease course. Both disability and radiologic progression of disease were found to develop most rapidly during the first years after disease onset and to assume a slow, nearly linear rate of increase after 10 years. Approximately 10% of patients did not develop significant disability. This study suggests that it is possible to identify, early in the disease course, those patients who are likely to develop severe disability, and that "disease-modifying" therapy might well be initiated earlier in such patients and used consistently throughout the subsequent treatment.

315 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Alternative radiologic techniques are compared by performing a randomized, controlled trial in which hand films of rheumatoid arthritis patients were read by several skilled observes, and critical selection of the method of assessing study endpoint is of great importance.
Abstract: Radiologic assessment of progressive joint destruction in rheumatoid arthritis is generally considered to be the ultimate standard for evaluation of treatment. We compared alternative radiologic techniques by performing a randomized, controlled trial in which hand films of rheumatoid arthritis patients were read by several skilled observes. The number of joints evaluated (34 versus 18) was found to make relatively little difference, but the number of readers and their experience level was critical. Films should be read in pairs. Joint space narrowing and erosion scores were shown to contribute independent information. Use of recommended techniques can reduce the number of patients required and, thus, can reduce the cost of a clinical trial by more than half and can substantially increase the sensitivity and efficiency of a trial. Therefore, critical selection of the method of assessing study endpoint is of great importance.

172 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The outpatient costs, inpatient costs, and total costs were all positively related to the Health Assessment Questionnaire Disability Index, but were not associated with self-reported pain.
Abstract: The economic impact of chronic illness has important implications for medical practice and health policy. To determine the yearly costs of illness for those who have rheumatoid arthritis, a detailed, self-administered questionnaire was developed. The questionnaire was completed by 940 patients. Direct costs (recorded as charges) include the average annual expenditures by all patients and third party payers for: hospital care ($913), physician costs ($206), other health professional visits ($71), medications ($436), laboratory tests ($217), radiographs ($116), assistive devices ($24), and nontraditional therapies ($22). The total annual medical costs per patient were $2,533. In a multivariate analysis that controlled for age, sex, education, and disease duration, the outpatient costs, inpatient costs, and total costs were all positively related to the Health Assessment Questionnaire Disability Index (P f less than 0.01) and global health (P f less than 0.01), but were not associated with self-reported pain.

155 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: During 1981, 123 of 816 patients with rheumatoid arthritis were hospitalized 160 times because of the disease, and the mean length of hospitalization was 13.1 days, andThe average cost for total joint surgery was $12,287.
Abstract: During 1981, 123 of 816 patients (15.1%) with rheumatoid arthritis were hospitalized 160 times because of the disease. The mean length of hospitalization was 13.1 days, and the cost $7,845. Surgery accounted for 54.4% of admissions, but 69.2% of costs. The average cost for total joint surgery was $12,287. Most medical admissions (46.6%) were for the diagnosis or treatment of articular disease, but 42.5% were for treatment of side effects of therapy, and 11.0% for complications of RA. The most commonly performed surgical procedures included reconstructive surgery of the hand/wrist (n = 35) and foot (n = 22), followed by total knee replacement (n = 18).

69 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: ARAMIS is a prototype of a national chronic-disease data-bank system consisting of parallel, longitudinal, clinical data sets from 17 diverse locations; the data describe the courses of thousands of patients with rheumatic disease followed over many years.
Abstract: ARAMIS is a prototype of a national chronic-disease data-bank system consisting of parallel, longitudinal, clinical data sets from 17 diverse locations; the data describe the courses of thousands of patients with rheumatic disease followed over many years. Chronic-disease data-bank systems include the data themselves, protocols to ensure their quality, computer systems for their manipulation, statistical procedures for analysis and an appropriately skilled staff. Such a data resource facilitates analyzing long-term health outcomes and the factors associated with particular outcomes. Such systems are mandated by the overwhelming prevalence of chronic illness; the variability, complexity and uniqueness of a patient's course; the difficulties of traditional randomized approaches in these areas, and the time span required for studying these problems.

58 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A prospective, parallel, descriptive study of 737 consecutive new uses for 11 drugs prescribed for patients with definite or classic rheumatoid arthritis, which found gold had the most apparent effect and drug costs increased strikingly with gold, and laboratory costs tripled.
Abstract: We performed a prospective, parallel, descriptive study of 737 consecutive new uses for 11 drugs prescribed for patients with definite or classic rheumatoid arthritis. The patients were from 5 geographically dispersed sites. Researchers used validated outcome assessment instruments to measure endpoints of disability, pain, patient global assessment, medication costs, laboratory costs, and number of physician visits. Patients were studied by strict prospective protocol at 6-month intervals for 3 years. Controls included parallel results with other drugs, and before and after values for the individual patient. Beneficial effects were observed with the “disease-modifying” drugs: intramuscular gold, pencillamine, and methotrexate. Of these, gold had the most apparent effect. An average of 9 months of gold therapy resulted in highly significant reductions in disability (P < 0.005), pain (P < 0.001), and patient global assessment (P < 0.005). However, patients receiving gold and methotrexate had nearly twice as many visits to physicians. In addition, drug costs increased strikingly with gold, and laboratory costs tripled. Relatively minor differences among nonsteroidal antiinflammatory agents were difficult to interpret. The outcome assessment techniques used in the study are sensitive measures, which confirm the results of experimental studies and extend observations to new outcomes, including cost and disability.

43 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: During 1981, centers in Phoenix, Saskatoon, Stanford and Wichita monitored hospitalizations for 816 patients with rheumatoid arthritis, finding charges and length of stay were responsive to health care delivery system, availability of facilities, and geographic and center variation.
Abstract: During 1981, centers in Phoenix, Saskatoon, Stanford and Wichita monitored hospitalizations for 816 patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Admission rates varied 2-fold, and admissions for evaluation and treatment 10-fold across centers. Admissions were related primarily to disease severity, but in US centers, were reduced by a factor of 3 by prepaid health care. Length of stay was shortest in California (7.3 days), and longest in Saskatoon (16.3) where designated arthritis beds and government prepaid health care existed. Average charges for surgery were as high as $10,000 in Phoenix and as low as $4550 in Wichita. Charges and length of stay were unrelated to disease severity, but were responsive to health care delivery system, availability of facilities, and geographic and center variation.

39 citations




Journal ArticleDOI
08 Aug 1986-JAMA
TL;DR: This study is designed to address the possibility of self-selection into the runners group individuals who are resistant to the development of osteoarthritis as part of an ongoing eight-year prospective study of 961 runners and randomly selected community controls.
Abstract: In Reply.— Drs Murphy and Ehrlich are appropriately concerned, as are we, by the possibility of self-selection into the runners group individuals who are resistant to the development of osteoarthritis. Our article reported an initial cross-sectional study—part of an ongoing eight-year prospective study of 961 runners and randomly selected community controls. This study, now in its second year, is designed to address this issue. Already, however, there are compelling reasons to suspect that little self-selection bias is present. If the purported self-selection were due to gradual dropouts of those developing osteoarthritis from running groups, then we should get different results when we count all runners of any distance, past or present, as runners, than when we include only avid club members. In fact, exactly the same findings hold. Moreover, the same results hold when we compare runners and nonrunners within the community control group, a population of subjects randomly selected