Authors
Yumi Arai, Naohiro Izawa, Shigeto Tohma, Toshihiro Matsui, Yuho Kadono
Published in
Modern rheumatology. Jul 07, 2026. Epub Jul 07, 2026.
Abstract
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a well-recognised risk factor for fractures. However, short-term fracture risk factors remain unclear. This study aimed to elucidate factors useful for short-term fracture prevention.
Patients were enrolled in the National Database of Rheumatic Diseases in Japan (2002-2020) were analysed. Modifiable risk factors included changes in disease activity, modified health assessment questionnaire (mHAQ) scores and oral glucocorticoid usage.
Of the 37,466 patients with RA enrolled, 1655 experienced a first fracture. Sex, age, disease duration, disease activity, mHAQ score and glucocorticoid usage significantly differed between patients with and without fractures. Among 734 with 4-year pre-fracture data, mHAQ scores gradually increased over consecutive years before the fracture. When classified into four groups according to mHAQ changes over 2 consecutive years, patients with continuous increases had significantly higher fracture incidence (2.13%) than those with increases only in years 1-2 (1.43%), only in years 2-3 (1.59%) or with no increase across 2 consecutive years).
A consecutive 2-year increase in mHAQ score is associated with an increased risk of subsequent fracture in patients with RA, offering valuable insight for targeted fracture prevention strategies.
PMID:
42412733
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 08 Jul 2026.
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