Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Ben Hargreaves is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ben Hargreaves.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2016

IL-6-driven STAT signalling in circulating CD4+ lymphocytes is a marker for early anticitrullinated peptide antibody-negative rheumatoid arthritis

Amy E. Anderson; Arthur G. Pratt; Mamdouh Sedhom; John Paul Doran; Christine Routledge; Ben Hargreaves; Philip M Brown; Kim-Anh Lê Cao; John D. Isaacs; Ranjeny Thomas

Objectives A previously identified signal transduction and activator of transcription-3 (STAT3) target-enriched gene signature in circulating CD4+ T cells of patients with early rheumatoid arthritis (RA) was prominent in autoantibody-negative individuals. Here, interleukin (IL)-6-mediated STAT signalling was investigated in circulating lymphocytes of an independent early arthritis patient cohort, seeking further insight into RA pathogenesis and biomarkers of potential clinical utility. Methods Constitutive and IL-6-induced expression of phosphorylated STAT1 (pSTAT1) and pSTAT3 was determined in T and B cells using Phosflow cytometric analysis in patients with RA and controls. Contemporaneous levels of serum cytokines were measured by immunoassay. Induced gene expression was measured in cultured CD4+T cells by quantitative real-time PCR. Results Among circulating lymphocytes of 187 patients with early arthritis, constitutive pSTAT3 correlated with serum IL-6 levels maximally in CD4+ T cells. Increased constitutive pSTAT3, but not pSTAT1, was observed in circulating CD4+ T cells of patients with early anticitrullinated peptide autoantibody (ACPA)-negative RA compared with disease controls, and these levels decreased alongside markers of disease activity with IL-6R-targeted treatment. Among patients presenting with seronegative undifferentiated arthritis (UA) the ratio of constitutive pSTAT3:pSTAT1 in CD4+ T cells contributed substantially to an algorithm for predicting progression to classifiable RA during a median of 20 months follow-up (area under receiver operator characteristic curve=0.84; p<0.001). Conclusions Our findings support a particular role for IL-6-driven CD4+ T cell activation via STAT3 during the induction of RA, particularly as a feature of ACPA-negative disease. CD4+ T cell pSTAT measurements show promise as biomarkers of UA–RA progression and now require independent validation.


Arthritis Care and Research | 2017

Subjective and Objective Measures of Dryness Symptoms in Primary Sjögren’s Syndrome – Capturing the discrepancy

Om Bezzina; Peter Gallagher; Sheryl Mitchell; Simon Bowman; Bridget Griffiths; Hindmarsh; Ben Hargreaves; Elizabeth Price; Colin Pease; Paul Emery; Peter Lanyon; Michele Bombardieri; Nurhan Sutcliffe; Costantino Pitzalis; J A Hunter; Monica Gupta; John McLaren; Annie Cooper; Marian Regan; Ip Giles; David Isenberg; Saravanan Vadivelu; David Coady; Bhaskar Dasgupta; Neil McHugh; Steven Young-Min; Robert J. Moots; Nagui Gendi; Mohammed Akil; K. MacKay

To develop a novel method for capturing the discrepancy between objective tests and subjective dryness symptoms (a sensitivity scale) and to explore predictors of dryness sensitivity.


Rheumatology | 2016

Components of treatment delay in rheumatoid arthritis differ according to autoantibody status: validation of a single-centre observation using national audit data

Arthur G. Pratt; Dennis Lendrem; Ben Hargreaves; Osman Aslam; James Galloway; John D. Isaacs

Objective. To determine whether time to treatment following symptom onset differs between RA patients according to autoantibody status. Methods. A single-centre retrospective analysis of a UK early RA inception cohort was first undertaken to identify those components of the patient journey that differed by serological subtype. Data from a UK national audit of early inflammatory arthritis patients was accessed to replicate the key finding. Results. A total of 173 RA patients were diagnosed over a 31-month period, of whom 80 (46%) were ACPA/RF double-seropositive (ACPA+/RF+), 53 (31%) ACPA−/RF−, 17 (10%) ACPA+/RF− and 23 (13%) RF+/ACPA−. Overall, ACPA+/RF+ patients experienced significantly longer symptom duration before DMARD initiation. This was accounted for by delays in their presentation to primary care following symptom onset—a finding that was robustly confirmed in an independent dataset of 2192 UK early RA patients. In contrast, ACPA−/RF− patients were significantly more likely to experience delays in DMARD initiation after presenting to secondary care. Conclusion. Causes of treatment delays in early RA differ according to patients’ autoantibody status. More insidious symptom onset and/or distinct health-seeking behaviours among ACPA+/RF+ patients may contribute to late presentations in primary care, whereas ACPA−/RF− patients experience delayed diagnosis and treatment in secondary care. These observations inform the research agenda, potentially influencing the design of service delivery for early arthritis patients.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2016

THU0323 Predictors of Disease Severity, Lymphoma and Death: Prevalence in Patients Registered on The United Kingdom Primary Sjögren's Syndrome Registry

E. Lea; Ben Hargreaves; Dennis Lendrem; Sheryl Mitchell; V. Hindmarsh; S. Bowman; B Griffiths; Wan-Fai Ng

Background There has been much research aimed at elucidating key biological and clinical features which predict severity of disease and development of lymphoma in patients with primary Sjögrens syndrome (pSS). Key biological predictors identified include the presence of leukopenia or lymphopenia, hypocomplementaemia, cryoglobulinaemia, monoclonal gammopathy; key clinical predictors include younger age at time of symptom onset or diagnosis, peripheral neuropathy, salivary gland enlargement and skin involvement (particularly palpable purpura) [1–4]. The UK Primary Sjögrens Syndrome Registry (UKPSSR) is a MRC funded patient cohort, devised to facilitate research into pSS to improve understanding of the condition. Objectives Ascertain the prevalence of putative clinical predictors amongst UKPSSR patients. Explore the relationship between demographics, clinical parameters, disease severity and lymphoma development. Methods Patients were identified on the UKPSSR (n=868), those with insufficient data were excluded from analysis (n=36). Frequency of the predictors was calculated for remaining 832 patients. Patients were assigned a value for each predictor: 1 for present, 0 for absent. These values were then added to provide the prevalence of each predictor within the cohort, and a cumulative score for each patient. Each patient had 2 cumulative scores: one for disease severity and risk of death, the other for risk of lymphoma. Patients with a recorded age of pSS symptom onset (n=739) were analysed to investigate the relationship between age of onset and development of lymphoma. SPSS used for statistical analysis. Results Pearson Chi-squared analysis found a statistically significant (p=0.004) increased incidence of lymphoma in patients presenting with symptoms of pSS before the age of 35. Predictors of lymphoma development were more common in patients whose symptoms started between age 20–34 (p=0.05). Patients with diagnosed lymphoma had a higher cumulative lymphoma risk score than patients who did not have lymphoma (p=0.05). Predictors of severe disease were found to be more common in patients whose symptoms began before age 35 (p=0.05). Conclusions This analysis corroborates the findings of previous research showing an increased lymphoma prevalence in patients presenting with pSS at a younger age [4]. It also finds a statistically significant link between poor prognostic features and development of lymphoma as described in the literature [2,3]. Further statistical analysis will aim to establish the link between each predictor and the development of systemic manifestations of pSS, baseline and cumulative ESSDAI scores and lymphoma. References Brito-Zeron, P., et al., Systemic activity and mortality in primary Sjögren syndrome. Ann Rheum Dis. Luciano, N., et al., One year in review 2015: Sjögrens syndrome. Clin Exp Rheumatol. Nocturne, G. and X. Mariette, Sjögren syndrome-associated lymphomas. BJH. Ramos-Casals, M., et al., Systemic involvement in primary Sjögrens syndrome evaluated by the EULAR-SS disease activity index. Rheumatology. Disclosure of Interest None declared


ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting | 2016

Objective Improvement in Fatigue Scores for Primary Sjögren’s Patients Receiving a Tailored Multidisciplinary Fatigue Intervention in a Generic Fatigue Clinic

Katie Hackett; Dennis Lendrem; Ben Hargreaves; Vicki Strassheim; Zoe Gotts; Vincent Deary; Fai Ng; Julia L. Newton

Methods: We recruited 96 participants into the study. Participants with ACR criteria for knee OA were recruited (n=84), who were divided into advanced OA (n=72), who had severe enough disease to require total knee replacement (TKR). Early knee OA subjects had pain but did not require surgery (n=12). An additional 12 controls were recruited to control for pain measures and tissue comparisons from participants undergoing surgery for non-OA reasons. All participants were assessed by Western Ontario and MacMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC). All subjects had knee MRI to define BML characteristics, synovitis and cartilage damage, scored using the MRI Knee Osteoarthritis Score (MOAKS). Tissue was harvested at TKR for BML analysis using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and tissue microarray using Illumina. For SEM, tissue blocks were embedded in poly(methyl methacrylate) to give intact tissue and analysed to obtain 3 Dimensional SEM. For microarray, RNA was isolated and reverse transcribed using the Qiagen system, then subjected to microarray using standard Illumina protocols.Background/Purpose: A newly developed and (cross-cultural) validated measurement tool, the computerized Animated Activity Questionnaire (AAQ) for assessing activity limitations in hip and knee osteoarthritis (HKOA) patients, consists of video animations from which patients can choose the animation that best matches their own performance. For application in daily clinical practice as well as in research, the aim of this study was to determine reliability, responsiveness, and interpretability of the AAQ. Methods: First, 238 HKOA patients mixed from hospital and rehabilitation center completed the AAQ twice with 7 days in between. Test-retest reliability (intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC)) the Standard Error of Measurement (SEM), and the Smallest Detectable Change (SDC) were calculated. Second, 92 other patients with hip or knee OA were followed for 6 months in order to assess responsiveness. Patients received conservative physical therapy treatment or joint replacement surgery and were measured before intervention and 6 months later. We hypothesized that change scores on the AAQ (score range 0-100) correlated at least 0.6 with self-report (ADL subscore of the Hip disability and Knee Injury Osteoarthritis Outcome Score,), performance based tests (Timed Up and Go test, Stair Climbing Test, and 30 seconds Chair Stand Test), and a Global Rating of Change (GRC). To estimate the Minimal Important Change (MIC) of the AAQ an anchor-based MIC distribution method was used. The Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) method was used to find the optimal AAQ change score that best discriminates. The MIC was compared to the SDC in order to facilitate the interpretation of change scores. Results: ICC for test-retest reliability was 0.93 (95%CI: 0.91-0.95). SEM and SDC were 4.9 and 13.5, respectively. After 6 months the change scores of the AAQ correlated 0.67 with self-reports, 0.47-0.55 with performance based tests, and 0.43 with GRC. The ROC curve showed an area under the curve of 0.71 with a sensitivity of 62% and a specificity of 79% for the optimal MIC of 9.12 for discrimination. The MIC was smaller than the SDC meaning that the change is important but cannot be distinguished from measurement error in individual patients. Conclusion: The AAQ showed good internal consistency, test-retest reliability, and SDC resulting in an average mean score difference of the AAQ over 14% indicating a real improvement in activity limitations in a mix of surgical and conservative HKOA patients. The AAQ is considered responsive, despite the moderate correlations with performancebased tests and GRC, which seems to be caused by the slightly different, new construct the AAQ is measuring with regard to the domain activity limitations.For a searchable version of these abstracts, please visit www.acrabstracts.org.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2015

A2.3 STAT3-regulated gene expression in circulating CD4 + T cells discriminates RA patients independently of clinical parameters in early arthritis: a validation study

Arthur G. Pratt; Amy E. Anderson; Julie Diboll; N Nair; Andrew Skelton; Dennis Lendrem; Ben Hargreaves; C Routledge; P Brown; P Stocks; Anne Barton; Jd Isaacs

Background and objectives We previously identified a 12-gene “signature,” enriched for STAT3 target genes, which was predictive of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in circulating CD4+ T cells of early arthritis patients. We conducted an independent replication study, and interpreted its findings in the context of other clinically relevant baseline parameters. Materials and methods Gene expression in highly purified peripheral blood CD4+ T cells from disease modifying anti-rheumatic drug (DMARD)- and steroid-naïve patients with suspected inflammatory arthritis was measured using Illumina microarray technology. A nested analysis focussed on normalised expression of those transcripts hybridised by the 12 probes identified during the previous study. Concurrent STAT3 pathway activation was determined in CD4+ T cells by paired whole blood flow cytometry, and detailed clinical and serological data were recorded for all participants. Analyses included the use of univariate tests, hierarchical clustering and logistic regression. Results In this independent cohort of 161 early arthritis patients, normalised expression of ten out of the 12 CD4+ T cell “signature” genes studied differed significantly between patients presenting with RA and alternative diagnoses (p < 0.05). Hierarchical clustering using the signature discriminated an RA-enriched subgroup of early arthritis patients. Differential expression was most pronounced for the STAT3-regulated genes PIM1, BCL-3 and SOCS3 (>1.3-fold difference; p < 0.001 in each case), each of whose expression correlated strongly with paired CD4+ T cell intracellular phospho-STAT3. Multivariate analysis confirmed that the expression of each of these three genes predicted a diagnosis of RA independently of CRP, ESR, swollen joint count and age. Conclusions The regulation of gene expression by STAT3 in circulating CD4+ T cells is confirmed as an early event in RA pathogenesis. The functional relevance of this observation remains the subject of on-going in vitro investigation.


2015 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting Abstract Supplement | 2015

Assignable Causes for Fatigue in Primary Sjögren’s Syndrome: Data from the UK Primary Sjögren’s Syndrome Registry

Rl Lambson; Ben Hargreaves; Dennis Lendrem; Hindmarsh; C Humphrey; Sheryl Mitchell; B Griffiths; Simon Bowman; Wan-Fai Ng; Registry Ukpss

Are Ankylosing Spondylitis, Psoriatic Arthritis and Undifferentiated Spondylarthritis Associated with an Increased Risk of Cardiovascular Disease?For a searchable version of these abstracts, please visit www.acrabstracts.org. Please Note: It may take several minutes for this file to download.Background/Purpose: Person-centred care (PCC) is a holistic approach with respectful and individualized care allowing negotiation of care where persons with health problems are empowered to be involved in health decisions. Patients’ illness narratives constitute a starting point for building a collaboration with health care professionals and to empower them to play an active role in their health care. Little is known of the impact of PCC vs. regular care on patients’ skills as health care consumers. The aim was to study the impact on effective consumers’ skills over 6 and 12 months as measured by the Effective Consumer Scale (EC17) in patients undergoing biological therapy and randomly assigned to either a nurse-led rheumatology clinic (NLC) based on PCC or to a rheumatologist-led clinic (RLC) based on regular care.Methods: A 12 month RCT in 107 patients with chronic inflammatory arthritis1. Inclusion criteria were ongoing biological therapy and a DAS28 ≤3.2. All patients met a rheumatologist at inclusion and after 12 months, while the 6 month follow-up was randomized to either at an NLC (PCC) or at an RLC (regular care). Outcome measure was the EC17, developed and endorsed by the OMERACT, including five subscales; 1. Use of health information, 2. Clarifying personal priorities, 3. Communicating with others, 4. Negotiating roles and 5. Deciding and taking action. EC17 total score ranges from 0-100, worse to best. Differences between and within NLC and RLC were analyzed with Friedmans’ test or Mann Whitney U-test.Results: After 12 months 97 patients completed the RCT (NLC n=47, RLC n=50), mean (SD) age 55.4 (12.7) years, disease duration 16.7 (11.5) years, DAS28 2.1 (0.7), HAQ 0.54 (0.38), global health 20.4 (17.1), pain 21.1 (18.0) and 56% were women. There were no statistically significant differences within or between the two intervention groups at baseline nor in EC17 total score mean (SD) at baseline (NLC 83.5 (9.4) vs. RLC 83.2 (10.8), 6 months (NLC 85.4 (10.4) vs. RLC 82.9 (10.9) and 12 months (NLC 85.3 (11.1) vs. RLC 82.3 (10.9)). However, in NLC there was a statistically significant improvement in EC17 subscale “1. Use of health information” at both 6 and 12 months (p=0.041 and p=0.004 respectively).Conclusion: Replacing just one of three visits over 12 months to an NLC based on PCC instead of an RLC based on regular care resulted in more effective consumers concerning the use of health information. Larger studies over longer time frames focusing on PCC are needed to better understand its full impact on effective consumer skills measured by EC17.References:1. Larsson I, et al. Randomized controlled trial of a nurse-led rheumatology clinic for monitoring biological therapy. J Adv Nurs 2014;70:164-75.Background/Purpose: Chronic widespread pain (CWP), one of the hallmarks of fibromyalgia, is not uncommon in adolescents and it has previously been shown that adolescents with pain often become young adults with pain. CWP often co-varies with anxiety, depression, and stress symptoms in adults, but the knowledge regarding this is small in youth and young adults.The aim was to study the associations between CWP, anxiety, depression and stress in adolescents attending first year of high school.Methods: A computerized questionnaire to 296 adolescents attending Swedish high school, with validated questions regarding presence and distribution of pain (Epipain mannequin), stress symptoms (ELO question), anxiety and depression (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale – HADS), and health related quality of life (HRQL as measured by EQ5D). Pain was considered chronic when persistent for more than three months, and the subgroup CWP was defined according to the 1990 ACR criteria for fibromyalgia. Statistical analyses in SPSS v21 with comparison of means by Student’s t-test and proportions by chi2-test or Fischer’s exact test.Results: 257 (87%) out of 296 eligible students, mean (SD) age 16.1 (0.7) and 65.8% girls, responded to the questionnaire. Prevalence of chronic pain was 20.8% and that of the subgroup CWP was 4.7%, without any gender differences (boys 18.2% vs girls 22.2%; p=0.224, and 3.4% vs 5.4%; p=0.692). High level (4 or 5 on a 5 point scale) of stress symptoms were less common in boys (16.0% vs 28.2%; p=0.015), as was possible or probable anxiety (17.1% vs 44.4%; p<0.001), but not depression (10.3% vs 12.5%; p=0.764). Students with high level of stress reported CWP five times more often than those with less stress (30.4% vs 5.8%; p=0.001). Students with probable anxiety reported CWP ten times more often than students with no anxiety (17.6% vs 1.8%; p=0.001), and CWP was also more common, but not statistically significant, in students with probable depression (20.0% vs 3.1%; p=0.163). Those reporting CWP had significantly lower HRQL (0.58 vs 0.87; p=0.038) than students with no chronic pain.Conclusion: The high prevalence of chronic pain and the strong associations between CWP and reports of stress and anxiety in adolescents highlights that a multifactorial background to chronic pain must be considered early in life. An apparent lower score in EQ5D also indicates that the presence of CWP has an marked impact on HRQL also in adolescents.Background/Purpose: The treatment target for axial spondyloarthritis (SpA) is to maximize health-related quality of life (HRQoL) by controlling disease activity and improving functioning. The treatment cornerstones are a combination of patient education, pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatment. Health professionals are familiar with providing patient education but the knowledge is scarce concerning how this education is experienced by the patients.The aim was to describe patients’ experiences of education in SpA management.Methods: The study had a descriptive design with a qualitative conventional content analysis approach performed in seven steps in accordance with Graneheim & Lundman (1). The analysis aimed to describe and preserve contextual meanings. After coding and subgrouping meaningful parts of the text were merged into categories. Eleven interviews were conducted between 2014-2015 in patients with SpA based on a strategic sampling in order to achieve variation with regard to sex (7 men, 4 women), age (38-66 years), subdiagnoses (5 patients with AS, 6 with USpA), quality of life (EQ5D 0.29-1.0), disease activity (BASDAI 1-6), physical function (BASFI 0-5), and global health (BASG 0-7) .Results: Three categories representing patients’ experiences of patient education in disease management emerged; guiding education, reliable education and available education. Guiding education comprised SpA management including disease knowledge such as symptoms, prognosis, treatment, self-management, climate impact, heredity, and assisting devices. Reliable education meant how and by whom the education was communicated and was considered reliable if it was based on science and communicated by specialists, for example by physician, nurse, PT, dietician and senior patients with experience of rheumatic diseases. The patients experienced difficulties in assessing the large flow of education coming from various sources. Individualized education also increased the reliability. Available education meant that the education can and should be presented in varied formats, and that the amount of information could be chosen. The education could be given orally (through meetings, videos, lectures), in writing (by pamphlets, e-mails, journals, webpages) or obtained through own personal experiences. There were requests to utilize newer media like skype, video and chat forums. Furthermore, individual contacts with healthcare professionals when needed were of importance.Conclusion: This study highlights the importance of obtaining a guiding, reliable and available patient education for management of SpA. Health care professionals need to consider the importance of presenting varied formats of education based on patients’ experiences and expectations.References:1.Graneheim UH, Lundman B. Qualitative content analysis in nursing research: concepts, procedures and measures to achieve trustworthiness. Nurse education today 2004;24(2):105-12.PMN Reactivity Contribute to Acute Onset Joint Inflammation By Increasing CXCL8 Production in Joints of RA Patients with Anti-Collagen II AntibodiesBig Data International Primary Sjogren Syndrome Registry : Baseline Characterization and Diagnostic Approach in 6047 Patients Fulfilling the 2002 AE CriteriaThe Link Between DAS28 and the Short-Term Risk of Acute Coronary Syndrome in RA, and Its Driving FactorsHypomethylation in Enhancer and Promoter Regions of Interferon Regulated Genes in Multiple Tissues Is Associated with Primary Sjogrens SyndromeReceptor Activator of Nuclear Factor Kappa-B Ligand (RANKL) and Sclerostin Are Related to Joint Destruction in Early Rheumatoid Arthritis Unrelated to Polymorphisms of the Genes


2015 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting | 2015

Components of treatment delay in rheumatoid arthritis differ according to autoantibody status

Arthur G. Pratt; Ben Hargreaves; Dennis Lendrem; John D. Isaacs

Are Ankylosing Spondylitis, Psoriatic Arthritis and Undifferentiated Spondylarthritis Associated with an Increased Risk of Cardiovascular Disease?For a searchable version of these abstracts, please visit www.acrabstracts.org. Please Note: It may take several minutes for this file to download.Background/Purpose: Person-centred care (PCC) is a holistic approach with respectful and individualized care allowing negotiation of care where persons with health problems are empowered to be involved in health decisions. Patients’ illness narratives constitute a starting point for building a collaboration with health care professionals and to empower them to play an active role in their health care. Little is known of the impact of PCC vs. regular care on patients’ skills as health care consumers. The aim was to study the impact on effective consumers’ skills over 6 and 12 months as measured by the Effective Consumer Scale (EC17) in patients undergoing biological therapy and randomly assigned to either a nurse-led rheumatology clinic (NLC) based on PCC or to a rheumatologist-led clinic (RLC) based on regular care.Methods: A 12 month RCT in 107 patients with chronic inflammatory arthritis1. Inclusion criteria were ongoing biological therapy and a DAS28 ≤3.2. All patients met a rheumatologist at inclusion and after 12 months, while the 6 month follow-up was randomized to either at an NLC (PCC) or at an RLC (regular care). Outcome measure was the EC17, developed and endorsed by the OMERACT, including five subscales; 1. Use of health information, 2. Clarifying personal priorities, 3. Communicating with others, 4. Negotiating roles and 5. Deciding and taking action. EC17 total score ranges from 0-100, worse to best. Differences between and within NLC and RLC were analyzed with Friedmans’ test or Mann Whitney U-test.Results: After 12 months 97 patients completed the RCT (NLC n=47, RLC n=50), mean (SD) age 55.4 (12.7) years, disease duration 16.7 (11.5) years, DAS28 2.1 (0.7), HAQ 0.54 (0.38), global health 20.4 (17.1), pain 21.1 (18.0) and 56% were women. There were no statistically significant differences within or between the two intervention groups at baseline nor in EC17 total score mean (SD) at baseline (NLC 83.5 (9.4) vs. RLC 83.2 (10.8), 6 months (NLC 85.4 (10.4) vs. RLC 82.9 (10.9) and 12 months (NLC 85.3 (11.1) vs. RLC 82.3 (10.9)). However, in NLC there was a statistically significant improvement in EC17 subscale “1. Use of health information” at both 6 and 12 months (p=0.041 and p=0.004 respectively).Conclusion: Replacing just one of three visits over 12 months to an NLC based on PCC instead of an RLC based on regular care resulted in more effective consumers concerning the use of health information. Larger studies over longer time frames focusing on PCC are needed to better understand its full impact on effective consumer skills measured by EC17.References:1. Larsson I, et al. Randomized controlled trial of a nurse-led rheumatology clinic for monitoring biological therapy. J Adv Nurs 2014;70:164-75.Background/Purpose: Chronic widespread pain (CWP), one of the hallmarks of fibromyalgia, is not uncommon in adolescents and it has previously been shown that adolescents with pain often become young adults with pain. CWP often co-varies with anxiety, depression, and stress symptoms in adults, but the knowledge regarding this is small in youth and young adults.The aim was to study the associations between CWP, anxiety, depression and stress in adolescents attending first year of high school.Methods: A computerized questionnaire to 296 adolescents attending Swedish high school, with validated questions regarding presence and distribution of pain (Epipain mannequin), stress symptoms (ELO question), anxiety and depression (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale – HADS), and health related quality of life (HRQL as measured by EQ5D). Pain was considered chronic when persistent for more than three months, and the subgroup CWP was defined according to the 1990 ACR criteria for fibromyalgia. Statistical analyses in SPSS v21 with comparison of means by Student’s t-test and proportions by chi2-test or Fischer’s exact test.Results: 257 (87%) out of 296 eligible students, mean (SD) age 16.1 (0.7) and 65.8% girls, responded to the questionnaire. Prevalence of chronic pain was 20.8% and that of the subgroup CWP was 4.7%, without any gender differences (boys 18.2% vs girls 22.2%; p=0.224, and 3.4% vs 5.4%; p=0.692). High level (4 or 5 on a 5 point scale) of stress symptoms were less common in boys (16.0% vs 28.2%; p=0.015), as was possible or probable anxiety (17.1% vs 44.4%; p<0.001), but not depression (10.3% vs 12.5%; p=0.764). Students with high level of stress reported CWP five times more often than those with less stress (30.4% vs 5.8%; p=0.001). Students with probable anxiety reported CWP ten times more often than students with no anxiety (17.6% vs 1.8%; p=0.001), and CWP was also more common, but not statistically significant, in students with probable depression (20.0% vs 3.1%; p=0.163). Those reporting CWP had significantly lower HRQL (0.58 vs 0.87; p=0.038) than students with no chronic pain.Conclusion: The high prevalence of chronic pain and the strong associations between CWP and reports of stress and anxiety in adolescents highlights that a multifactorial background to chronic pain must be considered early in life. An apparent lower score in EQ5D also indicates that the presence of CWP has an marked impact on HRQL also in adolescents.Background/Purpose: The treatment target for axial spondyloarthritis (SpA) is to maximize health-related quality of life (HRQoL) by controlling disease activity and improving functioning. The treatment cornerstones are a combination of patient education, pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatment. Health professionals are familiar with providing patient education but the knowledge is scarce concerning how this education is experienced by the patients.The aim was to describe patients’ experiences of education in SpA management.Methods: The study had a descriptive design with a qualitative conventional content analysis approach performed in seven steps in accordance with Graneheim & Lundman (1). The analysis aimed to describe and preserve contextual meanings. After coding and subgrouping meaningful parts of the text were merged into categories. Eleven interviews were conducted between 2014-2015 in patients with SpA based on a strategic sampling in order to achieve variation with regard to sex (7 men, 4 women), age (38-66 years), subdiagnoses (5 patients with AS, 6 with USpA), quality of life (EQ5D 0.29-1.0), disease activity (BASDAI 1-6), physical function (BASFI 0-5), and global health (BASG 0-7) .Results: Three categories representing patients’ experiences of patient education in disease management emerged; guiding education, reliable education and available education. Guiding education comprised SpA management including disease knowledge such as symptoms, prognosis, treatment, self-management, climate impact, heredity, and assisting devices. Reliable education meant how and by whom the education was communicated and was considered reliable if it was based on science and communicated by specialists, for example by physician, nurse, PT, dietician and senior patients with experience of rheumatic diseases. The patients experienced difficulties in assessing the large flow of education coming from various sources. Individualized education also increased the reliability. Available education meant that the education can and should be presented in varied formats, and that the amount of information could be chosen. The education could be given orally (through meetings, videos, lectures), in writing (by pamphlets, e-mails, journals, webpages) or obtained through own personal experiences. There were requests to utilize newer media like skype, video and chat forums. Furthermore, individual contacts with healthcare professionals when needed were of importance.Conclusion: This study highlights the importance of obtaining a guiding, reliable and available patient education for management of SpA. Health care professionals need to consider the importance of presenting varied formats of education based on patients’ experiences and expectations.References:1.Graneheim UH, Lundman B. Qualitative content analysis in nursing research: concepts, procedures and measures to achieve trustworthiness. Nurse education today 2004;24(2):105-12.PMN Reactivity Contribute to Acute Onset Joint Inflammation By Increasing CXCL8 Production in Joints of RA Patients with Anti-Collagen II AntibodiesBig Data International Primary Sjogren Syndrome Registry : Baseline Characterization and Diagnostic Approach in 6047 Patients Fulfilling the 2002 AE CriteriaThe Link Between DAS28 and the Short-Term Risk of Acute Coronary Syndrome in RA, and Its Driving FactorsHypomethylation in Enhancer and Promoter Regions of Interferon Regulated Genes in Multiple Tissues Is Associated with Primary Sjogrens SyndromeReceptor Activator of Nuclear Factor Kappa-B Ligand (RANKL) and Sclerostin Are Related to Joint Destruction in Early Rheumatoid Arthritis Unrelated to Polymorphisms of the Genes


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2014

Phospho-STAT1/3 and Gene Expression Measurement in Circulating CD4(+) T Cells As Diagnostic Tools in Early Autoantibody-Negative Rheumatoid Arthritis.

Amy E. Anderson; Arthur G. Pratt; Mamdouh Sedhom; Nisha Nair; Jonathan Massey; Christine Routledge; Ben Hargreaves; Philip Brown; Anne Barton; John D. Isaacs; Ranjeny Thomas

This free journal suppl. entitled: Special Issue: 2014 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting Abstract Supplement


Rheumatology | 2018

O08 Additive value of a fifteen-minute ultrasound screen to clinical predictors of an inflammatory diagnosis warranting DMARDs in an early arthritis clinic

Kundan Iqbal; Dennis Lendrem; Ben Hargreaves; John D. Isaacs; Ben Thompson; Arthur G. Pratt

Collaboration


Dive into the Ben Hargreaves's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Arthur G. Pratt

Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John D. Isaacs

Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Amy E. Anderson

Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Anne Barton

University of Manchester

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mamdouh Sedhom

University of Queensland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ranjeny Thomas

University of Queensland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ben Thompson

Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge