Objective To evaluate the association of neighborhood deprivation and structural barriers with disease burden in racial and ethnic subsets of patients with psoriatic arthritis (PsA). Methods PsA patients in the ACR RISE registry with reported race, region, and ≥3 years of follow‐up, were evaluated. Demographic factors, disease activity measures, social deprivation, defined by the area deprivation index (ADI) and therapeutic agents were stratified by race. Subgroup analyses were conducted to examine demographic and clinical characteristics across residential areas graded by the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation (HOLC), from ‘Best’ (HOLC 1 ‐ predominantly White residents) to ‘Hazardous’ (HOLC 4 or redlined ‐ predominantly Black residents) based on investment risk. Results The cohort included 21,429 predominantly female (57.7%), obese (56.1% BMI>30) PsA patients with median age 55 (12.8) years. High social deprivation was prevalent among Black patients (25.7 % vs. 2.3% Asian, 12.5% White and 17.3% Other), as was High Disease Activity (HDA, 40.2% vs. 25.8% Asian, 29.6% White, and 33.5% Other). Approximately 7% of PsA patients lived in HOLC‐graded districts. Smoking, obesity, high social deprivation, federal insurance and HDA were more prevalent in patients in HOLC 4 areas compared to HOLC 1 areas. HOLC 4 patients also had longer median IQR periods of HDA (105.0 0, 690 person‐days) and fewer days in remission (1.0 0, 5457 person‐days). Conclusion In the US, Black PsA patients have prevalent HDA and high social deprivation. Additionally, the enduring effects of structural racism appear to negatively influence PsA disease characteristics of patients living in historically redlined areas. image
Dowell et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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