Comparison of Upper Gastrointestinal Toxicity of Rofecoxib and Naproxen in Patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis
Claire Bombardier, M.D., Loren Laine, M.D., Alise Reicin, M.D., Deborah Shapiro, Dr.P.H., Ruben Burgos-Vargas, M.D., Barry Davis, M.D., Ph.D., Richard Day, M.D., Marcos Bosi Ferraz, M.D., Ph.D., Christopher J. Hawkey, M.D., Marc C. Hochberg, M.D., Tore K. Kvien, M.D., Thomas J. Schnitzer, M.D., Ph.D., for The VIGOR Study Group
Background Each year, clinical upper gastrointestinal eventsoccur in 2 to 4 percent of patients who are taking nonselectivenonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). We assessed whetherrofecoxib, a selective inhibitor of cyclooxygenase-2, wouldbe associated with a lower incidence of clinically importantupper gastrointestinal events than is the nonselective NSAIDnaproxen among patients with rheumatoid arthritis.
Methods We randomly assigned 8076 patients who were at least50 years of age (or at least 40 years of age and receiving long-termglucocorticoid therapy) and who had rheumatoid arthritis toreceive either 50 mg of rofecoxib daily or 500 mg of naproxentwice daily. The primary end point was confirmed clinical uppergastrointestinal events (gastroduodenal perforation or obstruction,upper gastrointestinal bleeding, and symptomatic gastroduodenalulcers).
Results Rofecoxib and naproxen had similar efficacy againstrheumatoid arthritis. During a median follow-up of 9.0 months,2.1 confirmed gastrointestinal events per 100 patient-yearsoccurred with rofecoxib, as compared with 4.5 per 100 patient-yearswith naproxen (relative risk, 0.5; 95 percent confidence interval,0.3 to 0.6; P<0.001). The respective rates of complicatedconfirmed events (perforation, obstruction, and severe uppergastrointestinal bleeding) were 0.6 per 100 patient-years and1.4 per 100 patient-years (relative risk, 0.4; 95 percent confidenceinterval, 0.2 to 0.8; P=0.005). The incidence of myocardialinfarction was lower among patients in the naproxen group thanamong those in the rofecoxib group (0.1 percent vs. 0.4 percent;relative risk, 0.2; 95 percent confidence interval, 0.1 to 0.7);the overall mortality rate and the rate of death from cardiovascularcauses were similar in the two groups.
Conclusions In patients with rheumatoid arthritis, treatmentwith rofecoxib, a selective inhibitor of cyclooxygenase-2, isassociated with significantly fewer clinically important uppergastrointestinal events than treatment with naproxen, a nonselectiveinhibitor.
Nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are among the mostcommonly used medications in the world.1 A major factor limitingtheir use is gastrointestinal toxicity. Although endoscopicstudies reveal that gastric or duodenal ulcers develop in 15to 30 percent of patients who regularly take NSAIDs,2 the chiefconcern is clinically important gastrointestinal problems, suchas bleeding. It has been estimated that more than 100,000 patientsare hospitalized and 16,500 die each year in the United Statesas a result of NSAID-associated gastrointestinal events.3,4
Most NSAIDs inhibit both cyclooxygenase-1 and cyclooxygenase-2,isoenzymes involved in the synthesis of prostaglandins.5 Cyclooxygenase-1is constitutively expressed and generates prostanoids involvedin the maintenance of the integrity of gastrointestinal mucosaand platelet aggregation,6 whereas at sites of inflammation,cyclooxygenase-2 is induced to generate prostaglandins thatmediate inflammation and pain.7 The antiinflammatory effectsof nonselective NSAIDs (those that inhibit both cyclooxygenase-1and cyclooxygenase-2) therefore appear to be mediated throughthe inhibition of cyclooxygenase-2,8 whereas their harmful effectsin the gastrointestinal tract as well as their antiplateleteffects are believed to occur primarily through the inhibitionof cyclooxygenase-1.5
Agents that selectively inhibit cyclooxygenase-2 have antiinflammatoryand analgesic effects that are similar to those of nonselectiveNSAIDs,9,10,11,12 but they induced significantly fewer ulcersin endoscopic trials.12,13,14,15 Whether such a decrease inthe number of ulcers translates into a similar decrease in thenumber of clinical gastrointestinal events is a matter of controversy.We performed a prospective, randomized, double-blind comparisonof rofecoxib and naproxen in more than 8000 patients with rheumatoidarthritis.
Methods
Study Population
Patients with rheumatoid arthritis who were at least 50 yearsold (or at least 40 years old and receiving long-term glucocorticoidtherapy) and who were expected to require NSAIDs for at leastone year were eligible. Patients were excluded if they had ahistory of another type of inflammatory arthritis, upper gastrointestinalsurgery, or inflammatory bowel disease; an estimated creatinineclearance of 30 ml or less per minute; a positive test for fecaloccult blood (this test was performed at base line in all patients);an unstable medical condition; a history of cancer or alcoholor drug abuse in the five years before the study; a historyof cerebrovascular events in the two years before the study;or a history of myocardial infarction or coronary bypass inthe year before the study. Patients with morbid obesity andthose who required or who had been receiving treatment withaspirin, ticlopidine, anticoagulants, cyclosporine, misoprostol,sucralfate, or proton-pump inhibitors or treatment with histamineH2receptor antagonists in prescription-strength doseswere also excluded from the study. Patients enrolled in thestudy were not thought to require the use of these agents bytheir treating physicians.
Study Design
The study was conducted at 301 centers in 22 countries. Threeto 14 days after discontinuing NSAIDs, eligible patients wererandomly assigned to receive either 50 mg of rofecoxib (Vioxx,Merck, Whitehouse Station, N.J.) once daily or 500 mg of naproxen(Novopharm Biotech, Toronto) twice daily. The groups were stratifiedaccording to the presence or absence of a history of gastroduodenalulcer, upper gastrointestinal bleeding, and gastroduodenal perforation.Blinding was achieved through the use of a matching placebofor each study medication.
Patients were permitted to take acetaminophen, non-NSAID analgesicmedications, glucocorticoids, and disease-modifying drugs (e.g.,methotrexate) to control their rheumatoid arthritis. Patientswere also allowed to take antacids and H2-receptor antagonistsin the following maximal doses: ranitidine, 150 mg daily; famotidine,20 mg daily; cimetidine, 400 mg daily; and nizatidine, 150 mgdaily. Nonstudy NSAIDs were not allowed. After randomization,the patients returned to the clinic at six weeks and at fourmonths and every four months thereafter until the end of thestudy. Patients were contacted by telephone at week 10 and everyfour months thereafter. Compliance was assessed by pill countsat clinic visits and by questioning of patients during the scheduledtelephone calls. Serum was obtained from all patients for Helicobacterpylori testing (HM-CAP, Enteric Products, Stonybrook, N.Y.).Investigators were not informed of the results of these testsduring the study.
The institutional review board or ethics review committee ateach center approved the protocol, and all patients gave writteninformed consent. A steering committee oversaw the study design,conduct of the trial, analyses of data, and drafting of thisreport. This committee was composed of 14 members, 2 of whomwere employees of the sponsoring pharmaceutical company. Anindependent data and safety monitoring board monitored the patients'safety. An independent, external (end-point) committee whosemembers were unaware of the patients' treatment assignmentsreviewed the data to determine which patients had reached thestudy end points. Because highly selective cyclooxygenase-2inhibitors do not inhibit platelet aggregation, which is mediatedby cyclooxygenase-1, there was a possibility that the incidenceof thrombotic cardiovascular events would be lower among patientstreated with nonselective cyclooxygenase inhibitors than amongthose treated with cyclooxygenase-2selective inhibitors.Therefore, cardiovascular events were also assessed for a futuremeta-analysis by independent committees whose members were unawareof the patients' treatment assignments. A separate analysisof these events, however, was not specified in the study design.
Study End Points
Patients who had potential clinical upper gastrointestinal eventswere evaluated and treated according to the standard practiceof the physicians who were caring for them. Patients who stoppedtaking the study medication before the study ended were followeduntil the end of the study to determine whether an upper gastrointestinalevent had occurred. Only events that were confirmed by the end-pointcommittee according to prespecified criteria (Table 1) and thatoccurred during treatment or within 14 days after the discontinuationof treatment were included in the primary analysis.
In addition, the protocol called for the analysis of all episodesof gastrointestinal bleeding, including confirmed and unconfirmedepisodes of upper gastrointestinal bleeding, and bleeding froma site beyond the duodenum that resulted in hospitalization,discontinuation of treatment, or a decrease in the hemoglobinlevel of at least 2 g per deciliter.
Assessment of Efficacy
For each patient both the investigator and the patient answereda Global Assessment of Disease Activity question at base line(after the discontinuation of prestudy NSAIDs), 6 weeks, 4 months,and 12 months and at the end of the study or when treatmentwas discontinued. The score can range from 0 ("very well") to4 ("very poor"), and higher scores indicate more disease activity.The Modified Health Assessment questionnaire was administeredonly to patients enrolled at centers in the United States atbase line, at six weeks, and at the end of the study or whentreatment was discontinued. This questionnaire evaluates theextent of functional disability in eight types of tasks performedon a daily basis. The level of effort required to perform eachtask is assessed on a 4-point scale on which a score of 0 indicatesno difficulty in performing the task and a score of 3 indicatesan inability to perform the task.16 Higher scores indicate moresevere disability.
Statistical Analysis
The primary hypothesis was that the risk of confirmed uppergastrointestinal events (gastroduodenal perforation or obstruction,upper gastrointestinal bleeding, and symptomatic gastroduodenalulcers) would be lower among patients who were taking rofecoxibthan among those who were taking naproxen. Secondary hypotheseswere that the risk of confirmed complicated events (perforation,obstruction, and severe upper gastrointestinal bleeding) andthe risk of both confirmed and unconfirmed upper gastrointestinalevents would be lower among patients who were taking rofecoxib.
Cox proportional-hazards analysis was used to compare the effectof treatment; the presence or absence of a history of gastrointestinalevents was a stratification factor in the analysis.17,18 Thescores for the Global Assessment of Disease Activity questionand Modified Health Assessment questionnaire were analyzed interms of the mean change from base line during the treatmentperiod. The primary population for analysis comprised all randomizedpatients. Subgroup analyses were conducted with use of Cox regressionanalysis.17,18 Interactions between treatments and subgroupswere assessed to determine whether the effect of rofecoxib ascompared with that of naproxen was consistent in the subgroups.We assessed data on general safety by evaluating 95 percentconfidence intervals of the differences in the proportions ofthe treatment groups with each adverse event.19 All statisticaltests were two-sided.
Results
Characteristics of the Patients
Between January 1999 and July 1999, we screened 9539 patientsand enrolled 8076; 4047 were randomly assigned to receive rofecoxib,and 4029 to receive naproxen. The major reasons for exclusionwere a contraindication to prolonged NSAID therapy (in the caseof 246 patients), a positive test for fecal occult blood (203patients), and a failure to meet inclusion criteria (355 patients).The median follow-up was 9.0 months in both treatment groups(range, 0.5 to 13). A total of 5742 patients (71.1 percent)continued to take their assigned medication until the end ofthe study. Rates of discontinuation were similar in the twogroups: 29.3 percent in the rofecoxib group (16.4 percent becauseof adverse events, 6.3 percent because of a lack of efficacy,and 6.6 percent for other reasons) and 28.5 percent in the naproxengroup (16.1 percent because of adverse events, 6.5 percent becauseof a lack of efficacy, and 5.9 percent for other reasons). Ninety-ninepercent of the patients in both groups took their medicationon at least 75 percent of the study days. The base-line characteristicswere similar in the two groups (Table 2).
Table 2. Base-Line Characteristics of the Patients.
Efficacy
Rofecoxib and naproxen had similar efficacy against rheumatoidarthritis (Table 3). In addition, the rates of discontinuationof treatment owing to a lack of efficacy were low in both groups(6.3 percent in the rofecoxib group and 6.5 percent in the naproxengroup).
Table 3. Effectiveness of Rofecoxib and Naproxen for Rheumatoid Arthritis.
Adverse Gastrointestinal Events
Confirmed upper gastrointestinal events occurred in 177 patients.In 53 of these patients the event was complicated. An additional13 patients had events that were reported by investigators butthat were judged by the end-point committee to be unconfirmed.
The time to the development of a confirmed upper gastrointestinalevent is shown in Figure 1. The rates per 100 patient-yearsand incidences of the prespecified clinical events are shownin Table 4 and Table 5, respectively. The relative risk of confirmedupper gastrointestinal events for patients in the rofecoxibgroup as compared with those in the naproxen group was 0.5 (95percent confidence interval, 0.3 to 0.6; P<0.001), whereasthe relative risk of complicated confirmed upper gastrointestinalevents was 0.4 (95 percent confidence interval, 0.2 to 0.8;P=0.005). The relative risk of complicated upper gastrointestinalbleeding for patients in the rofecoxib group as compared withthose in the naproxen group was 0.4 (95 percent confidence interval,0.2 to 0.7; P= 0.004), whereas the relative risk of bleedingbeyond the duodenum was 0.5 (95 percent confidence interval,0.2 to 0.9; P=0.03).
Table 5. Incidence of Confirmed Upper Gastrointestinal Events.
A per-protocol analysis of the 7925 patients without substantialprotocol violations demonstrated relative risks of confirmedupper gastrointestinal events and complicated confirmed eventsof 0.4 (95 percent confidence interval, 0.3 to 0.6; P<0.001)and 0.4 (95 percent confidence interval, 0.2 to 0.7; P= 0.003),respectively. The results of an intention-to-treat analysisof all confirmed upper gastrointestinal events throughout thestudy, including those that occurred at any time after the discontinuationof treatment, were similar and remained statistically significant(data not shown).
Subgroup analyses showed the following relative risks of clinicalgastrointestinal events among the patients in the rofecoxibgroup as compared with those in the naproxen group: patientswith no prior gastrointestinal events (relative risk, 0.5; 95percent confidence interval, 0.3 to 0.7), patients with priorgastrointestinal events (relative risk, 0.4; 95 percent confidenceinterval, 0.2 to 0.8), patients with no glucocorticoid therapyat base line (relative risk, 0.7; 95 percent confidence interval,0.4 to 1.2), and patients with glucocorticoid therapy at baseline (relative risk, 0.4; 95 percent confidence interval, 0.2to 0.6). The relative risks in these subgroups and the otherprespecified subgroups (defined according to sex, race or ethnicgroup, and location of study center) were not significantlydifferent, indicating that there was no significant interactionbetween the treatments and the subgroups.
Treatment with rofecoxib was associated with a significantlylower incidence of clinical gastrointestinal events regardlessof the results of serologic tests for H. pylori. However, therelative risks of clinical events among H. pylorinegativepatients and H. pyloripositive patients were significantlydifferent (P=0.04, data not shown). Finally, the relative riskof gastrointestinal events remained significantly lower (0.1;95 percent confidence interval, 0.02 to 1.0) in the rofecoxibgroup than in the naproxen group even in a subgroup at verylow risk (i.e., patients who were younger than 65 years, whowere negative for H. pylori, who had no history of a clinicalgastrointestinal event, and who were not taking glucocorticoidsat base line).
General Safety
The safety of both rofecoxib and naproxen was similar to thatreported in previous studies.20,21 The mortality rate was 0.5percent in the rofecoxib group and 0.4 percent in the naproxengroup. The rate of death from cardiovascular causes was 0.2percent in both groups. Ischemic cerebrovascular events occurredin 0.2 percent of the patients in each group. Myocardial infarctionswere less common in the naproxen group than in the rofecoxibgroup (0.1 percent vs. 0.4 percent; 95 percent confidence intervalfor the difference, 0.1 to 0.6 percent; relative risk, 0.2;95 percent confidence interval, 0.1 to 0.7). Four percent ofthe study subjects met the criteria of the Food and Drug Administration(FDA) for the use of aspirin for secondary cardiovascular prophylaxis(presence of a history of myocardial infarction, angina, cerebrovascularaccident, transient ischemic attack, angioplasty, or coronarybypass)22 but were not taking low-dose aspirin therapy. Thesepatients accounted for 38 percent of the patients in the studywho had myocardial infarctions. In the other patients the differencein the rate of myocardial infarction between groups was notsignificant (0.2 percent in the rofecoxib group and 0.1 percentin the naproxen group). When the data showing a reduction inthe rate of myocardial infarction in the naproxen group becameavailable after the completion of this trial, Merck, the manufacturerof rofecoxib, notified all investigators in ongoing studiesof a change in the exclusion criteria to allow patients to uselow-dose aspirin. There was no association between hypertensionand myocardial infarction; only a single patient (in the rofecoxibgroup) had both hypertension and a myocardial infarction asadverse events.
The most common adverse events leading to discontinuation oftreatment, excluding the gastrointestinal end points, were dyspepsia,abdominal pain, epigastric discomfort, nausea, and heartburn.In the rofecoxib group, significantly fewer patients discontinuedtreatment as a result of any one of these five upper gastrointestinalsymptoms than in the naproxen group (3.5 percent vs. 4.9 percent).The rates of discontinuation for any gastrointestinal events,including gastrointestinal end points, were also significantlylower in the rofecoxib group than in the naproxen group (7.8percent vs. 10.6 percent). The incidence of adverse effectsrelated to renal function was low and was similar in the twogroups (1.2 percent in the rofecoxib group and 0.9 percent inthe naproxen group); only 0.2 percent of patients in each groupdiscontinued treatment because of these adverse effects.
Discussion
We found that, in patients with rheumatoid arthritis, treatmentwith rofecoxib at twice the maximal dose approved by the FDAfor long-term use resulted in significantly lower rates of clinicallyimportant upper gastrointestinal events and complicated uppergastrointestinal events than did treatment with a standard dose(1000 mg per day) of naproxen. We also found that the incidenceof complicated upper gastrointestinal bleeding and bleedingfrom beyond the duodenum was significantly lower among patientswho received rofecoxib. Only 41 patients would need to be treatedwith rofecoxib rather than naproxen to avert one clinical uppergastrointestinal event in a one-year period. Although the optimaldose of rofecoxib for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritishas yet to be determined, data from a prior study indicate thatmaximal efficacy is achieved at a daily dose of 25 mg.23
A prospective study that compared NSAIDs alone with NSAIDs plusmisoprostol reported that 0.95 percent of patients with rheumatoidarthritis who were taking an NSAID alone had upper gastrointestinalcomplications over a period of six months,24 with a relativereduction in the risk of such complications with combinationtreatment of 40 percent during this period. These results aresimilar to our finding of a cumulative incidence of seriousupper gastrointestinal events over a six-month period of 0.75percent in the naproxen group and a relative reduction in riskof 67 percent in the rofecoxib group (data not shown). A 50percent reduction in the incidence of clinically important uppergastrointestinal events with rofecoxib as compared with a nonselectiveNSAID was also found in a prespecified combined analysis ofeight double-blind studies that included 4921 patients withosteoarthritis, none of whom received glucocorticoids.25 Patientswith rheumatoid arthritis have a higher risk of upper gastrointestinalevents than do patients with osteoarthritis.4 Thus, the resultsof our study extend the results of the combined analysis toa group of patients at higher risk of bleeding.
The results of a randomized, double-blind comparison of thecyclooxygenase-2selective inhibitor celecoxib and thenonselective NSAIDs ibuprofen and diclofenac were recently published.26In this trial of 7968 patients, 73 percent of whom had osteoarthritisand 27 percent of whom had rheumatoid arthritis, data were reportedfrom the first 6 months of a study period that extended forup to 13 months. Treatment with celecoxib was associated witha nonsignificant (P=0.09) trend toward a decrease in the incidenceof the primary end point (complicated ulcers and erosions) anda significant decrease (P=0.02) in the incidence of the secondaryend point (complicated and symptomatic ulcers).
The incidence of clinically important gastrointestinal eventswas lower in the rofecoxib group than in the naproxen groupin all subgroups we examined. Concomitant glucocorticoid andNSAID therapy has been reported to be associated with a higherrisk of a clinical gastrointestinal event than is NSAID therapyalone.4 Therefore, a larger reduction in the incidence of eventsmight have been expected in the subgroup that received bothan NSAID and glucocorticoids. There was a greater reductionin the relative risk of events in the subgroup of patients whowere taking glucocorticoids at base line than in the subgroupof patients who were not taking glucocorticoids at base line,but the difference between the groups was not significant.
Whether ulcers identified by endoscopic examination are markersof a clinical gastrointestinal event has been a matter of controversy.The relative reduction in the risk of such ulcers in two identicalstudies that compared 50 mg of rofecoxib daily with 800 mg ofibuprofen three times a day was 71 percent at six months.13,14Thus, our findings support the concept that the results of endoscopicstudies of ulcers can be extrapolated to clinical gastrointestinalevents.
In prior endoscopic studies, the frequency of ulcers was similarin patients taking rofecoxib and those taking placebo.13,14We could not include a placebo group, and no studies have yetassessed whether a cyclooxygenase-2selective inhibitoror the combination of nonselective NSAIDs plus gastroprotectivedrugs (such as misoprostol and proton-pump inhibitors) willachieve similar results.
Gastrointestinal symptoms are extremely common with NSAID therapy,as demonstrated by the fact that, in our study, the five mostcommon adverse events leading to the discontinuation of treatmentwere upper gastrointestinal symptoms. Although gastrointestinalsymptoms are poorly correlated with endoscopic findings of ulcersor clinical gastrointestinal events,27 significantly fewer patientsin the rofecoxib group than in the naproxen group discontinuedtreatment because of gastrointestinal symptoms.
The overall mortality rate was similar in the two groups, aswere the rates of death from gastrointestinal events and fromcardiovascular causes. The rate of myocardial infarction wassignificantly lower in the naproxen group than in the rofecoxibgroup (0.1 percent vs. 0.4 percent). This difference was primarilyaccounted for by the high rate of myocardial infarction amongthe 4 percent of the study population with the highest riskof a myocardial infarction, for whom low-dose aspirin is indicated.22The difference in the rates of myocardial infarction betweenthe rofecoxib and naproxen groups was not significant amongthe patients without indications for aspirin therapy as secondaryprophylaxis.
Naproxen inhibits the production of thromboxane by 95 percentand inhibits platelet aggregation by 88 percent, and this effectis maintained throughout the dosing interval28; therefore, theeffects of regular use of naproxen may be similar to those ofaspirin. Flurbiprofen, another NSAID that is a potent inhibitorof platelet-derived thromboxane, led to a 70 percent reductionin the rate of reinfarction as compared with placebo among patientsin whom acute myocardial infarction was successfully treatedwith thrombolysis, angioplasty, or both.29
Analyses of 7535 patients in double-blind trials comparing rofecoxibwith placebo and other NSAIDs (diclofenac, ibuprofen, and nabumetone)that do not produce sustained, maximal inhibition of plateletaggregation revealed similar rates of myocardial infarctionin all groups30 (and unpublished data). Thus, our results areconsistent with the theory that naproxen has a coronary protectiveeffect and highlight the fact that rofecoxib does not providethis type of protection owing to its selective inhibition ofcyclooxygenase-2 at its therapeutic dose and at higher doses.The finding that naproxen therapy was associated with a lowerrate of myocardial infarction needs further confirmation inlarger studies.
In summary, the use of the cyclooxygenase-2selectiveinhibitor rofecoxib resulted in significantly fewer clinicallyimportant upper gastrointestinal events than did treatment withnaproxen, a nonselective NSAID. The two drugs had similar ratesof clinical effectiveness.
Supported by a grant from Merck.
We are indebted to Christopher T. Brett, Dayna Carroll, RussellCender, Edward Chafart, Laurine Connors, Gary Gartenberg, NicoleGillies, Richard Holmes, Paige Reagan, Douglas J. Watson, DeboraP.L. Weiss, and Qinfen Yu for their substantial contributions.
Editor's note: Our policy requires authors of Original Articlesto disclose all financial ties with companies that make theproducts under study or competing products. In this case, thelarge number of authors and their varied and extensive financialassociations with relevant companies make a detailed listinghere impractical. Readers should know, however, that 11 of the13 principal authors (C.B., L.L., R.B.-V., B.D., R.D., M.B.F.,C.J.H., M.C.H., T.K.K., T.J.S., A.W.) have had financial associationswith Merck which sponsored the study and, inmost cases, with many other companies. The associations includeconsultancies, receipt of research grants and honorariums, andparticipation on advisory boards. The other two principal authors(A.R., D.S.) are employees of Merck. Details are included aspart of the article on the Journal 's Web site (http://www.nejm.org).
Source Information
From the Institute for Work and Health, Mount Sinai Hospital, and the University Health Network, Toronto (C.B.); the Gastrointestinal Division, Department of Medicine, University of Southern California School of Medicine, Los Angeles (L.L.); Merck, Rahway, N.J. (A.R., D.S.); the Faculty of Medicine and Research Division, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, and Hospital General de Mexico, Mexico City, Mexico (R.B.-V.); University of TexasHouston School of Public Health, Houston (B.D.); the Department of Clinical Pharmacology, University of New South Wales and St. Vincent's Hospital, Sydney, Australia (R.D.); the Division of Rheumatology, Department of Medicine, Escola Paulista de Medicina, Universidade Federal de São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil (M.B.F.); the Division of Gastroenterology, School of Medical and Surgical Sciences, University Hospital, Nottingham, United Kingdom (C.J.H.); the Division of Rheumatology and Clinical Immunology, University of Maryland, Baltimore (M.C.H.); Oslo City Department of Rheumatology, and Diakonhjemmet Hospital, Oslo, Norway (T.K.K.); and the Office of Clinical Research and Training, Northwestern University School of Medicine, Chicago (T.J.S.). Arthur Weaver, M.D., Arthritis Center of Nebraska, Lincoln, was another author.
Address reprint requests to Dr. Bombardier at the Institute for Work and Health, 250 Bloor St. E., Suite 702, Toronto, ON M4W 1E6, Canada, or at claire.bombardier{at}utoronto.ca.
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Appendix
The following persons participated in the study: InternationalSteering Committee: C. Bombardier (chair), L. Laine (cochair),A. Reicin, M. Hochberg, R. Day, T. Capizzi, P. Brooks, R. Burgos-Vargas,B. Davis, M. Ferraz, C. Hawkey, T.K. Kvien, T. Schnitzer, A.Weaver; Data Safety Board: M. Weinblatt (chair); D. Bjorkman,J. Neaton, A. Silman, R. Sturrock; End-Point Adjudication Committee:M. Griffin (chair), D. Jensen, M. Langman; Investigators: Argentina:E. DiGiorgio, H. Laborde, O. Messina, A. Strusberg; Australia:J. Bertouch, R. Day, G. McColl, P. Ryan, S. Sharma; Brazil:R. Bonfiglioli, C. Borges, J. Brenol, N. da Silva, M. Ferraz,F. Lima, C. Moreira, G. Novaes, A. Pessoa, F. Petean, S. Radominski,A. Samara, B. Souza; Canada: T. Anastassiades, M. Atkinson,A. Beaulieu, M. Bell, M. Camerlain, J. Canvin, M. Cohen, J.Hanly, J. Karsh, T. McCarthy, W. Olszynski, P. Patel, Y. Pesant,W. Pruzanski, K. Siminovitch, J. Thome, V. Verdejo-Aguilar;Chile: L. Barria, C. Fuentealba, L. Massardo, P. Riedemann,L. Roca, H. Rossi; China (Hong Kong): C. Lau; Colombia: M. Abello,P. Chalem, M. Jannault, J. Molina; Costa Rica: R. Alpizar, H.Garcia-Sancho; Czech Republic: L. Konecna, K. Pavelka, M. Sealackova,J. Vitova, R. Ahora; Ecuador: R. Villacis; Finland: M. Hakala,P. Hannonen, T. Helve, M. Nissila; Germany: R. Alten, M. Gaubitz,E. Gromnica-Ihle, H. Hantzschel, G. Hein, M. Keysser, R. Kurthen,B. Lang, F. Mielke, U. Muller-Ladner, C. Richter, M. Schattenkirchner,M. Schneider, H. Sorenson, E. Waldorf-Bolten, H. Watnatz, S.Wassenberg; Guatemala: E. Julian, R. Palomo; Israel: D. Buskila,A. Nahir, I. Rosner; Malaysia: S. Yeap; Mexico: R. Burgos, I.Garcia de la Torre, F. Irazoque, J. Arozco Alcala; New Zealand:P. Jones, L. McLean, C. Rajapakse; Norway: H. Gulseth, K. Helgetveit,A. Johannessen, C. Kaufmann, O. Knudsrod, T. Kvien, K. Mikkelsen,B. Rossebo, G. Sidenwall; Peru: A. Calvo Quioz, M. Gustavo,A. Hilgado, L. Portocarrero, E. Vera Bejar; Poland: J. Badurski,J. Brzezicki, M. Bykowska, I. Fiedorowicz-Fabrycy, J. Gaweda,P. Gluszki, B. Konieczna, S. Mackiewicz, J. Pazdur, L. Szczepanski,J. Szechinski; South Africa: I. Anderson, D. Gotlieb, A. Jacovides,A. Lubbe, G. Mody, M. Tikly; United States: Alabama: G. Divititorio,S. Fallahi, D. McLaine, W. Shergy, M.S. Touger, G. Williams;Arizona: B. Harris, P. Howard, D. Michel, L. Taber, J. Tesser,M. Maricic; California: E. Boiling, M. Brandon, G. Dolan, R.Dore, M. Greenwald, D. Haselwood, M. Keller, K. Kolba, C. Multz,R. Reid, D. Stanton, C. Weidmann, S. Weiner, J. Higashida; Colorado:S. Kassan, R. Lapidus, D. Scott, J. Thompson, C. Van Kerchov;Connecticut: E. Feinglass, J. Green, R. Schoen; Florida: M.Beilian, C. Chappel, J. Forstot, P. Freeman, N. Gaylis, B. Germain,M. Guttierrez, M. Heier, T. Johnson, M. Kaufman, R. Levin, M.Lowenstein, A. Marcadis, M. Mass, S. Matthews, H. McIlwain,J. Miller, M. Nunez, H. Offenberg, J. Popp, A. Reddy, W. Riskin,A. Rosen, Y. Sherrer, K. Stark, A. Torres; Georgia: J. Lieberman;Iowa: M. Brooks; Idaho: F. Dega, C. Scoville, C. Wiesenhutter;Illinois: F. Dietz, I. Fenton, M. Pick, R. Trapp, J. Zuzga,M. Ellman, G. Liang; Indiana: C. Arsever, R. Khairi, M. Stack,R. Fife; Kansas: N. Becker, P. Ginder, R. Lies; Louisiana: W.Eversmeyer, P. Sedrish, L. Serebro; Maine: L. Anderson, S. Block;Maryland: R. Marcus, D. McGinnis, N. Wei, T. Zizic, M. Hochberg;Massachusetts: C. Birbara, A. Dahdul, S. Helfgott, J. Hosey,S. Miller, R. Rapoport; Michigan: P. Coleman, R. Roschmann,H. Uhl, J. Taborn; Missouri: T. Weiss; Montana: S. English;Nebraska: W. Palmer, A. Weaver; Nevada: S. Miller; New Hampshire:B. Samuels, J. Trice; New Jersey: S. Golombek, H. Hassman, R.Hymowitz, C. Knee, D. Macpeek, R. Marcus, G. Rihacek, J. Rohlf,D. Worth; New Mexico: K. Bordenave; New York: P. Chatpar, M.Farber, A. Kaell, A. Porges, P. Riccardi, C. Ritchlin; NorthCarolina: G. Arnold, W. Chmelewski, G. Collins, W. Harperm,R. Harrell, T. Littlejohn, G. Schimizzi, R. Senter, A. Kashif;Ohio: T. Isakov, B. Long, D. Mandel, B. Rothschild, D. Schumacher,R. Sievers, S. Wolfe, K. Hackshaw, M. Hooper, R. Rothenberg;Oklahoma: C. Codding, R. Hynd, J. McKay, L. Jacobs; Pennsylvania:R. Kimelheim, A. Kivitz, W. Makarowski, G. McLaughlin, J. McMillen,R. Reese, J. Weisberg; Rhode Island: J. Scott; South Carolina:C. Barfiels, M. Brabham, K. Flint; Tennessee: C. Arkin, R. Gupta,R. Krause, H. Marker, T. Namey, L. Robinson, P. Wheeler, B.Tanner; Texas: A. Brodsky, F. Burch, W. Chase, A. Chubick, D.Halter, J. Rutstein; Utah: J. Booth; Virginia: C. Fisher, A.Goldstein; Washington: W. Eider, R. Ettlinger, R. Levy; Wisconsin:M. Pearson, G. Fiocco.
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