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Authors Khaled SAA, NasrEldin E, Makarem YS, Mahmoud HFF
Received 12 June 2020
Accepted for publication 19 August 2020
Published 25 September 2020 Volume 2020:13 Pages 595—606
DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/JIR.S265811
Checked for plagiarism Yes
Review by Single anonymous peer review
Peer reviewer comments 2
Editor who approved publication: Dr Ning Quan
Background and Objective: Disease
activity score 28 (DAS28) for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is the commonly used
DAS; it relies on clinical parameters that could be subjective. This work aimed
to create a more accurate DAS for RA and assess its validity.
Patients and Methods: The study included 98 RA patients and 53 matched controls; they
were interviewed, clinically examined, their visual analogue scales (VAS) were
reported, and then blood samples were withdrawn for erythrocyte sedimentation
rate (ESR), complete blood count (CBC), and C-reactive protein (CRP). Platelet
indices (PIs) were obtained from the CBC including Plt (platelet count), mean
platelet volume (MPV), platelet distribution width (PDW) and plateletcrit
(PCT). DAS28 was calculated for each patient using RheumaHelper mobile
software. Minitab Statistical Package® and SPSS
v20 software were used for data analysis.
Results and Conclusions: Results revealed perfect matching between
patients and controls as regarding age and gender. ESR, CRP and PDW were
significantly higher in patients than controls; also positive correlations were
detected among these variables. A new DAS for RA was developed; ESR, CRP, PDW and
MPV were the components for this index. Further analyses showed that this new
score was significantly higher in patients than controls and correlated with
DAS28 of the patients. Furthermore the new score could identify RA patients
from healthy subjects (cut off value < − 0.79) and stratified RA patients
according to their disease activity into low, intermediate, high, or in
remission. Conclusively, we developed a more precise, easily obtained new DAS
for RA. This new DAS has both diagnostic/prognostic values in patients with RA.
Keywords: rheumatoid
arthritis, platelet indices, disease activity