Spondyloarthritis: diagnosis and management: summary of NICE guidance
BMJ 2017; 356 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.j839 (Published 01 March 2017) Cite this as: BMJ 2017;356:j839Infographic available
Click here for a visual overview of how to assess people with suspected spoondyloarthritis in primary care, and when to refer them to a rheumatology specialist
Infographic poster available
Click here for an A2 poster version of the infographic, covering both referral and management of spondyloarthritis
- Katherine McAllister, technical analyst1,
- Nicola Goodson, senior lecturer in rheumatology2,
- Louise Warburton, GP with special interest in rheumatology, lead for Telford Musculoskeletal Service, associate medical director, senior lecturer in primary care3 4,
- Gabriel Rogers, technical adviser in health economics1
- 1National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, Manchester M1 4BT, UK
- 2Rheumatology Research group, Department of Musculoskeletal Biology I, Institute of Ageing and Chronic Disease, University of Liverpool, Liverpool L69 3BX, UK
- 3Shropshire Community Health NHS Trust, Shrewsbury SY3 8XL, UK
- 4Department of Primary Care and Health Sciences, Keele University, Staffordshire ST5 5BG, UK
- Correspondence to: G Rogers Gabriel.Rogers{at}nice.org.uk
What you need to know
Spondyloarthritis is often missed in non-specialist settings, leading to substantial delays in diagnosis and treatment
Axial spondyloarthritis affects similar numbers of women and men, is not always apparent on plain x ray, and occurs in people who are seronegative for human leucocyte antigen B27 (HLA-B27)
No single test can reliably diagnose or rule out spondyloarthritis—decisions cannot rest on an individual sign, symptom, or test result
Assess people with low back pain that started before the age of 45 years and has lasted for longer than 3 months for axial spondyloarthritis
Refer people with unexplained dactylitis, new onset inflammatory arthritis, or persistent non-mechanical enthesitis in multiple sites or in conjunction with other risk factors to a rheumatologist for investigation of peripheral spondyloarthritis
Spondyloarthritis encompasses a group of inflammatory conditions with some shared features, including extra-articular manifestations that may occur at initial presentation or later. The guideline distinguishes between peripheral and axial disease (see box 1).
Box 1: Types of spondyloarthritis
Predominantly axial
Ankylosing spondylitis (radiographic axial spondyloarthritis)
Non-radiographic axial spondyloarthritis
Predominantly peripheral
Psoriatic arthritis
Reactive arthritis (typically following gastrointestinal or genitourinal infections, including (but not limited to) Campylobacter, Chlamydia, Salmonella, Shigella, or Yersinia)
Enteropathic arthritis (associated with comorbid inflammatory bowel disease)
Note: Predominantly axial spondyloarthritis may also have peripheral features, and vice versa
Healthcare professionals in non-specialist settings frequently fail to recognise signs and symptoms of spondyloarthritis. Axial presentations of spondyloarthritis are often misdiagnosed as mechanical low back pain, leading to delays in access to effective treatments. There is an average delay of 8.5 years between symptom onset and diagnosis, with only around 15% of cases receiving a diagnosis within three months of initial presentation.1 Contrary to common misconceptions, axial spondyloarthritis affects similar numbers of women and men, is not always apparent on plain x ray, and occurs in people who are seronegative for human leucocyte antigen …
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