Rheumatoid Arthritis Disease Activity Score

DAS28-ESR
Disease Activity Score (ESR)

The original DAS28 formula using erythrocyte sedimentation rate as the inflammatory marker. Used in the majority of historical RA clinical trials and remains the required metric for some biologic prescribing pathways. Runs approximately 0.6 points higher than DAS28-CRP in the same patient.

Original Formula
Prevow ML, van Riel PLCM, et al.
Arthritis Rheum, 1995
DAS28-ESR vs DAS28-CRP: The ESR version runs about 0.6 points higher than the CRP version in the same patient. Do not compare scores across versions or use them interchangeably when making longitudinal treatment decisions. If your institution uses CRP, use the DAS28-CRP calculator instead.
1
Joint Counts
Tender Joint Count (TJC)
/ 28
Swollen Joint Count (SJC)
/ 28
28 joints assessed: bilateral shoulders, elbows, wrists, MCPs (x5), PIPs (x5), and knees. Hips, ankles, and MTPs are excluded.
2
Patient Global Assessment (VAS)
How active was your arthritis overall in the past week?
50
Patient rates overall disease activity 0-100 on a visual analogue scale. 0 = no activity, 100 = maximum activity.
0 (No disease activity)100 (Maximum activity)
3
Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate (ESR)
ESR Value
mm/hr
ESR must be at least 1 mm/hr because the formula uses ln(ESR). Enter the laboratory-reported value. Normal ESR varies by age and sex; the formula does not apply a correction for these variables.
📋 What This Calculator Does

The DAS28-ESR calculates a composite disease activity score using the 28-joint tender count, 28-joint swollen count, patient global assessment on a 100 mm VAS, and the natural logarithm of ESR. It is the original DAS28 formula developed and validated by Prevow et al. in 1995, and was the primary endpoint in the majority of RA clinical trials from the 1990s through the early 2010s.

The same four activity thresholds apply as for DAS28-CRP (remission below 2.6, low below 3.2, moderate 3.2-5.1, high above 5.1), but the ESR version will consistently produce higher scores in the same patient due to differences in how ESR and CRP behave mathematically in the formula.

ðŸŽŊ When to Use This

Use DAS28-ESR when your institution or health system specifically requires it for a biologic drug approval, insurance authorization, or registry entry. Some European payer systems and older biologic prescribing pathways were validated using DAS28-ESR data and continue to require it. In most clinical settings, DAS28-CRP has become the preferred version for day-to-day monitoring.

Never switch between ESR and CRP versions mid-monitoring without accounting for the approximately 0.6-point systematic difference. A patient who looked like they were in remission on DAS28-ESR and is now being scored with DAS28-CRP may appear to have improved purely due to the formula difference, not actual clinical improvement.

📊 Interpreting the Score
DAS28-ESR ScoreActivity StateClinical Meaning
< 2.6RemissionTreat-to-target goal. Consider biologic tapering in sustained remission.
2.6 to 3.2Low ActivityAcceptable alternative target. Monitor closely.
3.2 to 5.1Moderate ActivityConsider therapy adjustment. Most biologic eligibility criteria fall here.
> 5.1High ActivityActive disease requiring treatment change.
ðŸ’Ą Pearls and Pitfalls
✓
ESR lags behind clinical improvement. ESR is a non-specific acute phase reactant that reflects fibrinogen, immunoglobulins, and other proteins. It can remain elevated for weeks after clinical inflammation resolves. CRP is faster to respond and more directly reflects current inflammation, which is why most modern practice prefers DAS28-CRP for monitoring.
✓
Historical trial data used ESR. The original TEMPO, TICORA, PREMIER, and most early anti-TNF trials used DAS28-ESR as their primary endpoint. When interpreting these trial results and applying them to your patient, the ESR-based thresholds are what was actually validated in those studies.
⚠
ESR is confounded by non-inflammatory conditions. Age (ESR rises with age), anemia, pregnancy, hypergammaglobulinemia from any cause, and renal failure all independently elevate ESR without reflecting RA activity. An elderly patient with monoclonal gammopathy can have markedly elevated ESR and high DAS28-ESR scores from non-RA causes.
⚠
Do not mix ESR and CRP versions in longitudinal tracking. Switching formulas mid-course creates artificial apparent change in disease activity. If your patient's lab now reports CRP instead of ESR, start a new tracking baseline with DAS28-CRP rather than comparing to prior DAS28-ESR scores.
🔎 Evidence

The DAS28 was developed by Prevow, van 't Hof, Kuper, and colleagues as a simplification of the original 44-joint DAS, published in Arthritis and Rheumatism in 1995. The 28-joint modification was validated in a prospective longitudinal study and demonstrated comparable discriminative ability to the original DAS with significantly reduced assessment burden. The thresholds defining remission below 2.6, low disease activity, moderate, and high activity were validated by van Gestel et al. and formalized by Fransen and van Riel.

View Referencesâ–ū
1
Prevow ML, van 't Hof MA, Kuper HH, et al. Modified disease activity scores that include twenty-eight-joint counts. Development and validation in a prospective longitudinal study of patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Arthritis Rheum. 1995;38(1):44-48. Original DAS28-ESR development and validation paper.
2
Van Gestel AM, Prevoo MLL, van 't Hof MA, et al. Development and validation of the European League Against Rheumatism response criteria for rheumatoid arthritis. Arthritis Rheum. 1996;39(1):34-40. Establishes EULAR response criteria using DAS28.
3
Diri E, Greenmyer J, Stacy J, et al. DAS28-CRP cutoffs for high disease activity and remission are lower than DAS28-ESR in rheumatoid arthritis. ACR Open Rheumatol. 2020;2(9):506-510. Documents systematic 0.6-point difference between ESR and CRP versions.
For clinical decision support only. DAS28-ESR runs approximately 0.6 points higher than DAS28-CRP in the same patient. Do not compare scores between the two versions. This calculator is a monitoring tool for established RA, not a diagnostic instrument.
DAS28-ESR Score
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/ 9.4
02.63.25.19.4
Enter ESR to calculate
TJC component
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SJC component
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Patient global
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ESR component
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Clinical Interpretation
Enter ESR above to calculate your score.
DAS28-ESR = 0.56*sqrt(TJC) + 0.28*sqrt(SJC) + 0.014*GH + 0.70*ln(ESR)
EULAR Response (optional)
Enter previous DAS28-ESR score to calculate EULAR response category.
Enter previous score above
Reviewed by Mahiar Rabie, MS, MD · AutoimmuneCalc