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Featured researches published by Paul R. Fortin.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 1999

The American College of Rheumatology nomenclature and case definitions for neuropsychiatric lupus syndromes

Matthew H. Liang; Michael Corzillius; Sang-Cheol Bae; Robert A. Lew; Paul R. Fortin; Caroline Gordon; David A. Isenberg; Graciela S. Alarcón; Karin V. Straaton; Judah A. Denburg; Susan D. Denburg; John M. Esdaile; Bonnie I. Glanz; Elizabeth W. Karlson; Shahram Khoshbin; Malcolm P. Rogers; Peter H. Schur; John G. Hanly; Elizabeth Kozora; Sterling G. West; Robert G. Lahita; Michael D. Lockshin; Joseph McCune; Patricia M. Moore; Michelle Petri; W. Neal Roberts; Jorge Sanchez-Guerrero; Martin Veilleux; Robin L. Brey; Wayne D. Cornblath

OBJECTIVE To develop a standardized nomenclature system for the neuropsychiatric syndromes of systemic lupus erythematosus (NPSLE). METHODS An international, multidisciplinary committee representing rheumatology, neurology, psychiatry, neuropsychology, and hematology developed case definitions, reporting standards, and diagnostic testing recommendations. Before and after the meeting, clinician committee members assigned diagnoses to sets of vignettes randomly generated from a pool of 108 NPSLE patients. To assess whether the nomenclature system improved diagnostic agreement, a consensus index was developed and pre- and postmeeting scores were compared by t-tests. RESULTS Case definitions including diagnostic criteria, important exclusions, and methods of ascertainment were developed for 19 NPSLE syndromes. Recommendations for standard reporting requirements, minimum laboratory evaluation, and imaging techniques were formulated. A short neuropsychological test battery for the diagnosis of cognitive deficits was proposed. In the postmeeting exercise, a statistically significant improvement in diagnostic agreement was observed. CONCLUSION The American College of Rheumatology (ACR) Nomenclature for NPSLE provides case definitions for 19 neuropsychiatric syndromes seen in SLE, with reporting standards and recommendations for laboratory and imaging tests. It is intended to facilitate and enhance clinical research, particularly multicenter studies, and reporting. In clinical settings, consultation with other specialists may be required. It should be useful for didactic purposes but should not be used uncritically or as a substitute for a clinical diagnosis. The complete case definitions are available on the ACR World Wide Web site: http://www.rheumatology .org/ar/ar.html.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2001

Traditional Framingham risk factors fail to fully account for accelerated atherosclerosis in systemic lupus erythematosus

John M. Esdaile; Michal Abrahamowicz; Tamara Grodzicky; Yin Li; Constantina Panaritis; Roxane du Berger; Robert Côté; Steven Grover; Paul R. Fortin; Ann E. Clarke; Jean-Luc Senécal

OBJECTIVE The frequency of coronary heart disease (CHD) and stroke are increased in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), but the extent of the increase is uncertain. We sought to determine to what extent the increase could not be explained by common risk factors. METHODS The participants at two SLE registries were assessed retrospectively for the baseline level of the Framingham study risk factors and for the presence of vascular outcomes: nonfatal myocardial infarction (MI), death due to CHD, overall CHD (nonfatal MI, death due to CHD, angina pectoris, and congestive heart failure due to CHD), and stroke. For each patient, the probability of the given outcome was estimated based on the individuals risk profile and the Framingham multiple logistic regression model, corrected for observed followup. Ninety-five percent confidence intervals (95% CIs) were estimated by bootstrap techniques. RESULTS Of 296 SLE patients, 33 with a vascular event prior to baseline were excluded. Of the 263 remaining patients, 34 had CHD events (17 nonfatal MIs, 12 CHD deaths) and 16 had strokes over a mean followup period of 8.6 years. After controlling for common risk factors at baseline, the increase in relative risk for these outcomes was 10.1 for nonfatal MI (95% CI 5.8-15.6), 17.0 for death due to CHD (95% CI 8.1-29.7), 7.5 for overall CHD (95% CI 5.1-10.4), and 7.9 for stroke (95% CI 4.0-13.6). CONCLUSION There is a substantial and statistically significant increase in CHD and stroke in SLE that cannot be fully explained by traditional Framingham risk factors alone.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 1999

Outcomes of total hip and knee replacement: Preoperative functional status predicts outcomes at six months after surgery

Paul R. Fortin; Ann E. Clarke; Lawrence Joseph; Matthew H. Liang; Michael Tanzer; Diane Ferland; Charlotte B. Phillips; Alison J. Partridge; Patrick Bélisle; Anne H. Fossel; Nizar N. Mahomed; Clement B. Sledge; Jeffrey N. Katz

OBJECTIVE To determine whether patients with knee or hip osteoarthritis (OA) who have worse physical function preoperatively achieve a postoperative status that is similar to that of patients with better preoperative function. METHODS This study surveyed an observational cohort of 379 consecutive patients with definite OA who were without other inflammatory joint diseases and were undergoing either total hip or knee replacement in a US (Boston) and a Canadian (Montreal) referral center. Questionnaires on health status (the Short Form 36 and Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index) were administered preoperatively and at 3 and 6 months postoperatively. Physical function and pain due to OA were deemed the most significant outcomes to study. RESULTS Two hundred twenty-two patients returned their questionnaires. Patients in the 2 centers were comparable in age, sex, time to surgery, and proportion of hip/knee surgery. The Boston group had more education, lower comorbidity, and more cemented knee prostheses. Patients undergoing hip or knee replacement in Montreal had lower preoperative physical function and more pain than their Boston counterparts. In patients with lower preoperative physical function, function and pain were not improved postoperatively to the level achieved by those with higher preoperative function. This was most striking in patients undergoing total knee replacement. CONCLUSION Surgery performed later in the natural history of functional decline due to OA of the knee, and possibly of the hip, results in worse postoperative functional status.


Nature Genetics | 2008

Genetic variants near TNFAIP3 on 6q23 are associated with systemic lupus erythematosus.

Robert R. Graham; Chris Cotsapas; Leela Davies; Rachel Hackett; Christopher J. Lessard; Joanlise M. Leon; Noël P. Burtt; Candace Guiducci; Melissa Parkin; Casey Gates; Robert M. Plenge; Timothy W. Behrens; Joan E. Wither; John D. Rioux; Paul R. Fortin; Deborah S. Cunninghame Graham; Andrew Wong; Timothy J. Vyse; Mark J. Daly; David Altshuler; Kathy L. Moser; Patrick M. Gaffney

Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is an autoimmune disease influenced by genetic and environmental factors. We carried out a genome-wide association scan and replication study and found an association between SLE and a variant in TNFAIP3 (rs5029939, meta-analysis P = 2.89 × 10−12, OR = 2.29). We also found evidence of two independent signals near TNFAIP3 associated with SLE, including one previously associated with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). These results establish that variants near TNFAIP3 contribute to differential risk of SLE and RA.


Nature Genetics | 2009

Common variants in the NLRP3 region contribute to Crohn's disease susceptibility

Alexandra-Chloé Villani; Mathieu Lemire; Geneviève Fortin; Edouard Louis; Mark S. Silverberg; Catherine Collette; Nobuyasu Baba; Cécile Libioulle; Jacques Belaiche; Alain Bitton; Daniel Gaudet; Albert Cohen; Diane Langelier; Paul R. Fortin; Joan Wither; Marika Sarfati; Paul Rutgeerts; John D. Rioux; Severine Vermeire; Thomas J. Hudson; Denis Franchimont

We used a candidate gene approach to identify a set of SNPs, located in a predicted regulatory region on chromosome 1q44 downstream of NLRP3 (previously known as CIAS1 and NALP3) that are associated with Crohns disease. The associations were consistently replicated in four sample sets from individuals of European descent. In the combined analysis of all samples (710 father-mother-child trios, 239 cases and 107 controls), these SNPs were strongly associated with risk of Crohns disease (Pcombined = 3.49 × 10−9, odds ratio = 1.78, confidence interval = 1.47–2.16 for rs10733113), reaching a level consistent with the stringent significance thresholds imposed by whole-genome association studies. In addition, we observed significant associations between SNPs in the associated regions and NLRP3 expression and IL-1β production. Mutations in NLRP3 are known to be responsible for three rare autoinflammatory disorders. These results suggest that the NLRP3 region is also implicated in the susceptibility of more common inflammatory diseases such as Crohns disease.


Journal of Clinical Epidemiology | 1995

Validation of a meta-analysis: The effects of fish oil in rheumatoid arthritis

Paul R. Fortin; Robert A. Lew; Matthew H. Liang; Elizabeth A. Wright; Laurel A. Beckett; Thomas C. Chalmers; Richard I. Sperling

The purpose of this study was to validate the results of a meta-analysis showing the efficacy of fish oil in rheumatoid arthritis with the results of a re-analysis of the complete primary data set. A Medline search yielded seven published papers. Three additional trials were found by contacting authorities in the field. Inclusion criteria included (1) a double-blind, placebo-controlled study, (2) use of at least one of seven predetermined outcome measures, (3) results reported for both placebo and treatment groups at baseline and follow-up, (4) randomization, and (5) parallel or cross-over design. Papers were scored for quality. Demographic and outcomes variables were collected. For the re-analysis of the primary data, the same variables were abstracted for the 395 individual patients randomized. The meta-analysis demonstrated that dietary fish oil supplementation for 3 months significantly reduced tender joint count (rate difference [RD] [95% CI] = -2.9 [-3.8 to -2.1] [p = 0.001]) and morning stiffness (RD [95% CI] = -25.9 [-44.3 to -7.5] [p < 0.01]) as compared with heterogeneous dietary control oils. The re-analysis of the primary data confirmed a significant reduction in tender joint count (p = 0.001) and in morning stiffness (p < 0.02) in the parallel analysis that ignored interaction terms. The analyses that included an interaction term between site and treatment again confirmed a significant reduction in tender joint count. The results for morning stiffness were similar to the meta-analysis, but did not quite reach statistical significance (p = 0.052-0.083). The relative improvements in the other outcome variables did not reach statistical significance. Use of fish oil improved the number of tender joints and duration of morning stiffness at 3 months as analyzed by both meta- and mega-analysis. The fuller mega-analysis confirmed the results of the meta-analysis. The advantages of mega-analysis were as follows: (1) the ability to analyze the homogeneity of the patient populations, (2) the ability to make clinically sensible adjustments in the form of the comparison, and (3) the ability to examine subsets of the data.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2010

The protective effect of antimalarial drugs on thrombovascular events in systemic lupus erythematosus

Hyejung Jung; Raja Bobba; Jiandong Su; Zhaleh Shariati-Sarabi; Dafna D. Gladman; Murray B. Urowitz; Wendy Lou; Paul R. Fortin

OBJECTIVE The antimalarial medication hydroxychloroquine has been proposed as a thromboprotective agent in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), but studies thus far have been limited by the possibility of confounding by indication. This study was conducted to assess whether exposure to antimalarial drugs is associated with a decrease in thrombovascular events (TEs) in patients with SLE. METHODS The study was designed as a nested case-control study embedded in an inception cohort of patients with SLE, which allowed adjustments for possible confounding by calendar year, duration of disease, duration of observation, and severity of lupus. After controlling for the possible confounding variables in conditional logistic regression models, the use of antimalarial drugs was assessed for its effects on the development of TEs in lupus patients. RESULTS Fifty-four cases of TE were identified, and these were matched with 108 control subjects (lupus patients without TEs). Univariate analyses identified older age (odds ratio [OR] 1.04, 95% confidence interval [95%CI] 1.01-1.07) or being older than age 50 years (OR 3.5, 95% CI 1.4-8.6) and ever having hypertension (OR 2.5, 95% CI 1.0-5.8) as being associated with an increased risk of TEs, whereas use of antimalarial drugs (OR 0.31, 95% CI 0.13-0.71) was associated with a decreased risk of TEs. Separate analyses were done for arterial and venous TEs, which yielded similar results. In multivariate analyses, use of antimalarial drugs (OR 0.32, 95% CI 0.14-0.74) and older age (OR 1.04, 95% CI 1.01-1.07) were the only 2 variables that remained significant. CONCLUSION The results from this nested case-control study demonstrate that, after accounting for the effects of disease severity, disease duration, and calendar year, antimalarial drugs were found to be thromboprotective, being associated with a 68% reduction in the risk of all TEs, with a range of risk reduction of at least 26% up to as high as 86%.


Lupus | 2003

Validation of a systemic lupus activity questionnaire (SLAQ) for population studies

Elizabeth W. Karlson; Lawren H. Daltroy; C. Rivest; Rosalind Ramsey-Goldman; Elizabeth A. Wright; Alison J. Partridge; Matthew H. Liang; Paul R. Fortin

The goal of this work was to develop an economical way of tracking disease activity for large groups of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) patients in clinical studies. A Systemic Lupus Activity Questionnaire (SLAQ) was developed to screen for possible disease activity using items from the Systemic Lupus Activity Measure (SLAM) and tested for its measurement properties. The SLAQ was completed by 93 SLE patients just prior to a scheduled visit. At the visit, a rheumatologist, blinded to SLAQ results, examined the subject and completed a SLAM. Associations among SLAQ, and SLAM (omitting laboratory items) and between individual items from each instrument were assessed with Pearson correlations. Correlations between pairs of instruments were compared using Student’s t-tests. The mean score across all 24 SLAQ items was 11.5 (range 0 -33); mean SLAM without labs was 3.0 (range 0 -13). The SLAQ had a moderately high correlation with SLAM-nolab (r = 0.62, P < 0.0001). Correlations between patient-clinician matched pairs of items ranged from r = 0.06 to 0.71. Positive predictive values for the SLAQ ranged from 56 to 89% for detecting clinically significant disease activity. In studies of SLE, symptoms suggesting disease can be screened by self-report using the SLAQ and then verified by further evaluation.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2008

Autoantibodies and neuropsychiatric events at the time of systemic lupus erythematosus diagnosis: Results from an international inception cohort study

John G. Hanly; Murray B. Urowitz; F. Siannis; Vernon T. Farewell; Caroline Gordon; Sang-Cheol Bae; David A. Isenberg; Mary Anne Dooley; Ann E. Clarke; Sasha Bernatsky; Dafna D. Gladman; Paul R. Fortin; Susan Manzi; Kristjan Steinsson; Ian N. Bruce; Ellen M. Ginzler; Cynthia Aranow; Daniel J. Wallace; Rosalind Ramsey-Goldman; R. van Vollenhoven; Gunnar Sturfelt; Ola Nived; Jorge Sanchez-Guerrero; Graciela S. Alarcón; Michelle Petri; Munther A. Khamashta; Asad Zoma; J. Font; Kenneth C. Kalunian; J. Douglas

OBJECTIVE To examine, in an inception cohort of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) patients, the association between neuropsychiatric (NP) events and anti-ribosomal P (anti-P), antiphospholipid (lupus anticoagulant [LAC], anticardiolipin), anti-beta2-glycoprotein I, and anti-NR2 glutamate receptor antibodies. METHODS NP events were identified using the American College of Rheumatology case definitions and clustered into central/peripheral and diffuse/focal events. Attribution of NP events to SLE was determined using decision rules of differing stringency. Autoantibodies were measured without knowledge of NP events or their attribution. RESULTS Four hundred twelve patients were studied (87.4% female; mean +/- SD age 34.9 +/- 13.5 years, mean +/- SD disease duration 5.0 +/- 4.2 months). There were 214 NP events in 133 patients (32.3%). The proportion of NP events attributed to SLE varied from 15% to 36%. There was no association between autoantibodies and NP events overall. However, the frequency of anti-P antibodies in patients with central NP events attributed to SLE was 4 of 20 (20%), versus 3 of 107 (2.8%) in patients with other NP events and 24 of 279 (8.6%) in those with no NP events (P = 0.04). Among patients with diffuse NP events, 3 of 11 had anti-P antibodies (27%), compared with 4 of 111 patients with other NP events (3.6%) and 24 of 279 of those with no NP events (8.6%) (P = 0.02). Specific clinical-serologic associations were found between anti-P and psychosis attributed to SLE (P = 0.02) and between LAC and cerebrovascular disease attributed to SLE (P = 0.038). There was no significant association between other autoantibodies and NP events. CONCLUSION Clinically distinct NP events attributed to SLE and occurring around the time of diagnosis were found to be associated with anti-P antibodies and LAC. This suggests that there are different autoimmune pathogenetic mechanisms, although low sensitivity limits the clinical application of testing for these antibodies.


Arthritis Care and Research | 2010

Atherosclerotic vascular events in a multinational inception cohort of systemic lupus erythematosus

Murray B. Urowitz; Dafna D. Gladman; Dominique Ibañez; S.-C. Bae; Jorge Sanchez-Guerrero; Caroline Gordon; Ann E. Clarke; Sasha Bernatsky; Paul R. Fortin; John G. Hanly; Daniel J. Wallace; David A. Isenberg; Anisur Rahman; Graciela S. Alarcón; Joan T. Merrill; Ellen M. Ginzler; Munther A. Khamashta; Ola Nived; Gunnar Sturfelt; Ian N. Bruce; Kristjan Steinsson; Susan Manzi; Rosalind Ramsey-Goldman; Mary Anne Dooley; Asad Zoma; Kenneth C. Kalunian; M. Ramos; R. van Vollenhoven; Cynthia Aranow; Thomas Stoll

To describe vascular events during an 8‐year followup in a multicenter systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) inception cohort and their attribution to atherosclerosis.

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Susan Manzi

Allegheny Health Network

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Sasha Bernatsky

George Washington University

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