
Self-Reported Joint Pain Scores: Beyond RA, Key Information With Little Effort
The RADAI joint index designed for rheumatoid arthritis patients provides equally powerful information about disease status in osteoarthritis and psoriatic arthritis, according to a new comparative study. As a guide to severity, it is much quicker than waiting for lab results to come in.
Castrejn I, Yazici Y, and T Pincus.
Although it has RA in its name, the self-reported
Previous studies have used the RADAI only for RA and, in one trial, for ankylosing spondylitis.
The current study analyzed records from 465 consecutive patients (drawn from a prospective database of more than 1,500), two-thirds of whom were women, the majority Caucasian. Subjects were waiting to see a rheumatologist at a single center as part of their routine care for a rheumatologic condition. They also completed the Multidimensional Health Assessment Questionnaire (MDHAQ) scales.
The RADAI scores proved to add information beyond MDHAQ. Sixty-four percent of RA patients reported involvement in four or more of their own joint groups, as did nearly as many patients with OA (58%) and PSa (57%). The number of joints reported was not significantly different for these three conditions. SLE and gout were significantly different: Only a third of patients with SLE and 18% of those with gout reported four or more involved joint groups, and the number of joints was significantly smaller.
Often the only qualitative data a rheumatology patient’s medical records are the lab results, which usually aren’t available until after a particular visit, note these researchers. RADAI reports “may actually be preferable,” they contend, offering valuable information for discussion and action with minimal effort on the rheumatologist’s part.




