Search for: rheumatoid arthritis methotrexate autoimmune disease biomarker gene expression GWAS HLA genes non-HLA genes
ID | PMID | Title | PublicationDate | abstract |
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15647426 | Seven year changes in health status and priorities for improvement of health in patients w | 2005 Feb | OBJECTIVES: To examine possible changes in priorities for improvement in health and health status from 1994 to 2001 within the setting of the Oslo Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) Register, which provides representative data for the entire RA population in the county. METHODS: All living patients in the Oslo RA Register area received a postal questionnaire in 1994 and 2001, including the Arthritis Impact Measurement Scales 2 (AIMS2), Short Form-36, the modified Health Assessment Questionnaire, and pain and fatigue visual analogue scales (VAS). Priorities for improvement in health were examined through question 60 in AIMS2, where patients are asked to indicate three of 12 areas of health where they would most like to see improvement. RESULTS: The number of respondents aged 20-79 years in 1994/2001 was 932/830, with similar demographic characteristics (78.8/78.3% were female, mean age 60.6/60.8, and disease duration 12.6/13.9 years). Health status was improved in all dimensions, with statistical improvement for the physical dimension, global health and pain, from 1994 to 2001. The profile of priorities remained mostly unchanged. Improvement in pain had the highest priority in both cohorts. Both symptom modifying and disease modifying drugs were more extensively used in 2001. CONCLUSIONS: Health status had improved from 1994 to 2001, probably because of access to better and more aggressive treatments. Pain remained the area of highest priority for improvement among patients with RA-despite an improved level of pain in 2001. | |
15989117 | Phlegmonous gastritis in a patient with rheumatoid arthritis. | 2005 May | Phlegmonous gastritis is an acute infection of the stomach wall by pyogenic bacteria. It represents an extremely rare disease with a fulminating course and a high mortality rate. A precise lifetime diagnosis is generally unsuccessful. The inflammation, most often caused by alpha-hemolytic streptococci, is most frequently expressed in patients who are more susceptible to infection. Among these are elderly patients, women, patients with chronic gastritis, chronic peptic ulcer, hepatic cirrhosis and decreased immune tolerance, T-cell leukemia, patients with a low socio-economic status and alcoholics. In our paper we are describing the case of a 66-year old female patient, who had received many years of treatment for rheumatoid arthritis. She died due to phlegmonous gastritis, which was only established post-mortem. The authors share the opinion that the occurrence of the phlegmonous form of gastritis was influenced significantly by the treatment with nonsteroidal antirheumatics and corticosteroids, which she had received for many years and also immediately prior to the complication. | |
15717185 | [Early diagnosis of chronic systemic inflammatory disorders]. | 2005 Apr | Functionally relevant damage caused by chronic systemic inflammatory disorders of autoimmune and/or unknown origin can be reduced or sometimes avoided by early initiation of treatment. This requires a correct diagnosis which makes treatment as early as possible. Due to the often uncharacteristic symptoms at the onset of disease, early diagnosis in systemic inflammatory disorders represents a diagnostic challenge. This review outlines current standards and limitations in the early diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis, collagen vascular diseases and primary systemic vasculitides. Recent advances especially in serology and imaging techniques have improved early diagnosis of systemic inflammatory disorders. | |
16385494 | A new model for an etiology of rheumatoid arthritis: smoking may trigger HLA-DR (shared ep | 2006 Jan | OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether smoking and HLA-DR shared epitope (SE) genes may interact in triggering immune reactions to citrulline-modified proteins. METHODS: In a case-control study involving patients with recent-onset rheumatoid arthritis (RA), we studied interactions between a major environmental risk factor (smoking), major susceptibility genes included in the SE of HLA-DR, and the presence of the most specific autoimmunity known for RA (i.e., antibodies to proteins modified by citrullination). Immunostaining for citrullinated proteins in cells from bronchoalveolar lavage fluid was used to investigate whether smoking is associated with citrullination in the lungs. RESULTS: Previous smoking was dose-dependently associated with occurrence of anticitrulline antibodies in RA patients. The presence of SE genes was a risk factor only for anticitrulline-positive RA, and not for anticitrulline-negative RA. A major gene-environment interaction between smoking and HLA-DR SE genes was evident for anticitrulline-positive RA, but not for anticitrulline-negative RA, and the combination of smoking history and the presence of double copies of HLA-DR SE genes increased the risk for RA 21-fold compared with the risk among nonsmokers carrying no SE genes. Positive immunostaining for citrullinated proteins was recorded in bronchoalveolar lavage cells from smokers but not in those from nonsmokers. CONCLUSION: We identified an environmental factor, smoking, that in the context of HLA-DR SE genes may trigger RA-specific immune reactions to citrullinated proteins. These data thus suggest an etiology involving a specific genotype, an environmental provocation, and the induction of specific autoimmunity, all restricted to a distinct subset of RA. | |
16461437 | The relationship of medical, demographic and psychosocial factors to direct and indirect h | 2006 Aug | OBJECTIVES: Cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) is essential for the comparison of treatments for rheumatoid arthritis (RA). CEA centres on accurate measurement of health utility (HU) preferences. Direct measures of HU in RA patients demonstrate weaker correlations with health status (functional disability and pain) than indirect measures. We examined whether demographic and psychosocial factors relate to HU in RA patients. METHODS: HU was measured for 142 RA patients (76% women; mean age 58.75 yr) directly through standard gamble (SG) and time trade-off (TTO), and indirectly on the EuroQol (EQ-5D). Current pain (100 mm visual analogue scale) and recent functional disability (Health Assessment Questionnaire; HAQ) were assessed. A subsample of 48 provided demographic and psychosocial information (education, employment, marital/family status, knowledge about RA, medication beliefs, desirable responding, social support, optimism, and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale; HADS). RESULTS: Direct HU had higher means (SG = 0.88, TTO = 0.86) than indirect HU (EQ-5D = 0.52). HAQ functional disability correlated with SG (r = - 0.28), TTO (r = - 0.31) and EQ-5D (r = - 0.67). Current pain correlated with TTO (r = - 0.19) and EQ-5D (r = - 0.36). HADS depression correlated with TTO (r = - 0.35) and EQ-5D (r = - 0.64); HADS anxiety also correlated with EQ-5D (r = - 0.46). CONCLUSIONS: Demographic and psychosocial factors cannot completely explain either the significant differences between direct and indirect HUs in RA patients or the moderate correlations of direct HUs with health status. Characteristics of the SG and TTO may make them inappropriate for HU assessment and CEA among RA patients. | |
16635056 | Edaravone inhibits the disease activity in rheumatoid arthritis. | 2006 Apr | A male patient with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) developed acute stroke and was treated with the free radical scavenger, edaravone. Polyarthralgia improved with a reduction in serum C-reactive protein concentration soon after the start of edaravone administration. The disease activity score 28 (DAS28) also decreased. Edaravone appears to be effective for the control of RA. The usefulness of this potentially novel therapeutic agent should be tested in a well designed randomized controlled trial. | |
15742434 | Traditional and nontraditional cardiovascular risk factors are associated with atheroscler | 2005 Mar | OBJECTIVE: To determine the association between cardiovascular (CV) risk factors and atherosclerosis in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). METHODS: The common carotid artery intima-media thickness (IMT) and plaque were evaluated by high resolution B-mode ultrasound in 74 consecutive patients with RA. Patients with an IMT > or = 0.60 mm and plaque were considered to have atherosclerosis and advanced atherosclerosis, respectively. Traditional risk factors as well as an extensive range of other clinical and laboratory variables were recorded. Methods used to analyze the data included logistic regression, classification and regression tree (CART), and factor analyses. RESULTS: Fifty-three (72%) patients had atherosclerosis, 23 (31%) had plaque, and 21 (28%) were free of atherosclerosis. In multivariable analysis, age and hypertension were independently associated with atherosclerosis and plaque (p < or = 0.04). Radiographic scores and polymorphonuclear cell counts were also strongly associated with plaque (p < or = 0.008). Uric acid concentrations were associated with atherosclerosis, and hypothyroidism was associated with plaque, both with borderline significance (p = 0.078 and 0.052, respectively). In CART analysis, age, polymorphonuclear cell counts, and joint space narrowing in the hands were considered to be the most important determinants of plaque, and 62% of patients could be classified correctly after cross-validation. Factor analysis (varimax rotation) revealed that age and uric acid levels were related to low glomerular filtration rates, polymorphonuclear cell counts to disease activity, and radiographic scores to disease duration, and hypertension was associated with high cholesterol levels. The 10-year risk for a coronary event estimated using the Framingham risk equation (calculated from traditional risk factors) was only 7% in patients with plaque. CONCLUSION: Atherosclerosis in RA is associated with the traditional CV risk factors age and hypertension, as well as nontraditional risk factors comprising current inflammation as reflected by polymorphonuclear cell counts, cumulative inflammation as disclosed by radiographic scores, and, to a lesser extent, with uric acid levels and hypothyroidism. Multiple risk factor assessment equations that are based on traditional risk factors only are likely to be insufficient to capture CV risk extent in RA. | |
15804045 | Blockade of TNF does not alter oxygen burst and phagocytosis of human neutrophils in patie | 2005 | Clinical trials evaluating tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) binding agents in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) have demonstrated significant efficacy in reducing symptoms of disease and slowing radiographic progression. However, infectious complications are the most severe and common adverse effects of anti-TNF therapy. The functional capacities of neutrophils (PMNs) as the first line of defense in bacterial and fungal infections are enhanced by soluble TNF as a potent neutrophil primer. The aim of this study was to assess the influence of in vivo TNF blockade on oxygen burst (OB) and phagocytosis of human neutrophils. PMNs were derived from 20 patients with RA on anti-TNF-alpha therapy and 13 patients using conventional DMARDs. By flow cytometry we measured OB upon stimulation with Escherichia coli and N-formyl-1-methionyl-1-leucyl-phenylalanine (FMLP) with and without priming with granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) and/or TNF-alpha using dihydrorhodamine (DHR) 123. Phagocytosis of fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-labeled E. coli was also assessed by flow cytometry. Thirty-three healthy volunteers served as controls. Upon stimulation with E. coli and FMLP, there was no significant difference in OB between the two patient groups and healthy controls. Priming was effective in all groups. Phagocytosis of E. coli by PMNs was equally effective in controls and patients independent from the treatment regimen. These data show that OB, phagocytosis and responsiveness to priming with TNF and G-CSF of PMNs are not impaired in patients with RA treated with anti-TNF agents in comparison with patients on conventional DMARDs or healthy controls. Thus, the infectious complications observed in patients with TNF blockade cannot be explained by functional impairment of PMNs; however, the neutralization of TNF as a potent primer of neutrophil response may increase the susceptibility for infections in these patients. | |
16447237 | The LUNDEX, a new index of drug efficacy in clinical practice: results of a five-year obse | 2006 Feb | OBJECTIVE: To describe the use of the LUNDEX, a new index for comparing the long-term efficacy and tolerability of biologic therapies in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients treated in clinical practice. METHODS: Patients (n = 949) with active RA that had not responded to at least 2 disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs) including methotrexate, in whom biologic therapy was being initiated, were included in a structured clinical followup protocol. The protocol included collection of data on diagnosis, disease duration, previous and ongoing DMARD treatment, and dates on which biologic treatment was started and terminated. In addition, data on efficacy measures used for calculating validated response criteria, i.e., the European League Against Rheumatism and American College of Rheumatology response criteria, were collected at fixed time points. Data were prospectively registered from March 1999 through January 2004. The LUNDEX, a new index combining the proportion of patients fulfilling a selected response criteria set with the proportion of patients adhering to a particular therapy, was designed to compare the efficacy of the different therapies. RESULTS: Etanercept had higher overall LUNDEX values compared with infliximab, mostly because of a lower rate of adherence to therapy with infliximab. The relationship between the drugs was consistent irrespective of the response criteria used. CONCLUSION: The LUNDEX is a valuable tool for evaluating drug efficacy in observational studies. It has the advantage of integrating clinical response as well as adherence to therapy in a composite value. Moreover, the LUNDEX has a practical and potentially universal application independent of diagnosis and response criteria. | |
15801013 | A pilot study to determine whether disability and disease activity are different in Africa | 2005 Apr | OBJECTIVE: To compare the levels of disability and disease activity in African-Americans and Caucasians with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in an academic medical center practice, and to determine whether the differences are independently associated with ethnicity. METHODS: Data on socioeconomic, disease related, psychological, and behavioral variables were obtained from 100 outpatients (67 Caucasians, 33 African-Americans) with RA. Functional status was assessed with the Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ) and Disease Activity Score (DAS-28). Chi-square and Student t tests were used to test for differences between groups. Multiple regression analysis was used to determine whether ethnicity was associated with these differences independent of other factors known to influence disease outcome. RESULTS: African-Americans and Caucasians did not differ with respect to age, sex, disease duration, rheumatoid factor positivity, and medication compliance. African-Americans had higher scores than Caucasians for HAQ (1.5 +/- 0.8 vs 0.9 +/- 0.7; p < 0.001) and DAS-28 (5.5 +/- 1.3 vs 4.3 +/- 1.4; p < 0.001). Regression models showed that ethnicity was not independently associated with the higher HAQ and DAS-28 scores when controlled for demographic, socioeconomic, psychological, and behavioral factors. Arthritis self-efficacy approaches significance in the regression model. CONCLUSION: HAQ disability and RA disease activity were higher in African-Americans than Caucasians in this sample from an academic medical center practice. However, ethnicity was not independently associated with these outcomes when socioeconomic and psychological factors were taken into account. Improvement in self-efficacy has the potential to improve outcome in African-Americans with RA. | |
16514472 | The role of anticyclic citrullinated peptide antibodies in the differential diagnosis of e | 2006 Nov | There are clinical difficulties to differentiate elderly-onset rheumatoid arthritis (EORA) patients from those with polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR), especially when dealing with EORA-like PMR-onset, seronegative EORA, and PMR with peripheral synovitis, which constitute the subgroups presenting the greatest difficulties. Serum samples were obtained from two groups of patients, one with EORA diagnosis and another with a PMR diagnosis. Anticyclic citrullinated peptide (anti-CCP) antibodies (enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay method) and rheumatoid factor (RF; latex technique) were determined. Of the 16 EORA patients, 9 presented anti-CCP antibodies, 4 of whom tested positive for RF. Of the 12 EORA patients who remained negative to RF, 5 were positive for anti-CCP antibodies. Eight of the EORA patients started with polymyalgic symptoms. Three of these patients showed positive titles of anti-CCP antibodies with negative RF. All PMR patients presented negative anti-CCP antibodies, except one with weak positive titles, and all were negative for RF. Of 15 patients with PMR, 7 presented oligoarticular synovitis at the onset. After a mean follow-up of 3 months, two patients developed RA. When evaluating them for RF and anti-CCP antibodies, one tested negative, while the other was positive for both antibodies. We observed a tendency to higher values of anti-CCP antibodies in patients with extraarticular manifestations, radiological damage, and disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs. When compared to the PMR group, EORA patients presented positive anticitrulline antibodies at the beginning of the disease in a statistically significant amount. One third of the seronegative EORA patients presented positive anti-CCP antibodies at the onset. | |
16839511 | Vasculitis associated with connective tissue disorders. | 2006 Aug | Vasculitis associated with connective tissue disorders is an important cause of secondary vasculitis about which little is written. When vasculitis occurs in the setting of a preexisting connective tissue disorder, it often correlates with disease severity and portends a poorer prognosis. It may involve virtually any organ system and present in a myriad of ways. Prompt recognition and treatment of vasculitis can dramatically improve the outcome for the patient. This review focuses on recent insights into the clinical presentation and pathogenic mechanisms that may be involved. | |
16210750 | Exploring underlying life patterns of women with multiple sclerosis or rheumatoid arthriti | 2005 Oct | In Newman's theory, disease is one of many manifestations of underlying pattern and its existence provides meaningful information about person-environment interactions. Underlying patterns manifest differently over time, so clues to their understanding can be found within life stories. Further interpretation subsequent to illustrating expanding consciousness for seven women living with multiple sclerosis or rheumatoid arthritis suggested six underlying patterns expressed in theoretical terms as energy-fatigue, giving-receiving, rejecting-accepting, vulnerability-resilience, control-release, and being silent-speaking out. Discussion and comparison with the North American Nursing Diagnosis Association's dimensions for assessment of human response patterns illustrates how nurses caring for women could identify and use underlying patterns in practice. | |
16611865 | Morphological and quantitative assessment of mast cells in rheumatoid arthritis associated | 2006 May | BACKGROUND: The role of mast cells in extra-articular manifestations of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) has not been studied so far. OBJECTIVE: To characterise and quantify mast cells in RA associated interstitial pneumonia (IP) by an immunohistological study. METHODS: Lung biopsy specimens from 15 patients with RA associated IP, 12 patients with idiopathic IP, and 5 control patients were stained with antibodies directed against tryptase (mast cell marker). Morphological characterisation of stained specimens was carried out and staining was quantified by computer assisted image analysis. RESULTS: Tryptase staining showed the marked presence of mast cells in idiopathic IP and in RA associated IP. A significant difference in stained tissue area was found between RA associated IP (2.6%, IQR 2.0-3.2%, p = 0.015) and idiopathic IP (3.1%, IQR 1.8-3.7%, p = 0.003) compared with control tissue specimens (1.0%, IQR 0.7-1.5%). The extent of mast cell infiltration correlated well and inversely with pulmonary function variables. CONCLUSIONS: Mast cell infiltrates are present in RA associated IP and idiopathic IP. The observed correlation of pulmonary function and mast cell numbers would be consistent with the proposed role of mast cell mediators in the promotion of fibrogenesis. The findings provide a rationale for studying functional aspects of mast cell involvement in the pathogenesis of RA associated lung disease. | |
16331757 | Measuring preference weights for American college of rheumatology response criteria for pa | 2005 Dec | OBJECTIVE: To estimate weights for health states comprising American College of Rheumatology (ACR) response and different levels of adverse events associated with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) treatments. METHODS: A survey was mailed to 748 patients with RA from southern California. In addition to several questionnaires commonly used for patients with RA, patients were instructed to evaluate 10 hypothetical health states, in which they could have an ACR response and/or adverse events due to new treatments, with a visual analog scale (VAS). Patients also evaluated their current health with a VAS question and a time tradeoff (TTO) question. Linear extrapolation was used to derive 6 more health states. The Pearson correlation coefficient was used to validate VAS and TTO results. RESULTS: A total of 487 (65%) patients returned the survey. Among the 10 health states evaluated with VAS directly, the health state in which a patient has ACR70 with no adverse events had the highest VAS weight (0.84), followed by the one having an ACR50 response with no adverse events (0.80). Correlation coefficients ranged from 0.63 for the correlation between VAS and physical component summary to -0.18 between TTO and pain and tender joint count; the correlation coefficients were all statistically significant, indicating there was convergent validity of the VAS and that VAS functioned differently from TTO in how it measured weights. CONCLUSION: VAS weights for 16 ACR response health states of patients with RA were derived. These weights could be used for cost-utility analyses of interventions for patients with RA. | |
16052579 | An evaluation of the decision tree format of the American College of Rheumatology 1987 cla | 2005 Aug | OBJECTIVE: The American College of Rheumatology (ACR) 1987 criteria for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) can be applied in 2 formats, a standard "x/y" list and a decision tree. This study evaluated the performance of the decision tree compared with the list approach in the ascertainment of RA in subjects with new-onset inflammatory polyarthritis (IP) over the first 5 years of observation. Moreover, the use of clinical surrogates to substitute for missing rheumatoid factor (RF) and radiologic erosion data was assessed for validity and for its influence on the resulting RA prevalence estimates. METHODS: In this population-based prospective study, 848 subjects with new-onset IP were interviewed and examined at baseline, with followup at 1, 2, 3, and 5 years. RF and erosion status were determined at prespecified time points. The list criteria were applied cumulatively, while the decision tree was applied cross-sectionally using either data surrogates or the actual reported data. RA prevalence in the 848 subjects and agreement in classification between the 2 methods was assessed at each time point. The influence of using clinical surrogates on RA prevalence estimates at 5 years and the agreement between surrogate and real results were also analyzed. RESULTS: At baseline, RA prevalence was higher using the decision tree compared with the list approach (63% versus 47%; P = 0.0001); by 5 years of followup, RA estimates were approximately equal (69% versus 72%) and agreement between the approaches was good (kappa = 0.67). The use of surrogates had little influence on RA prevalence at 5 years, although substitution of metacarpophalangeal joint swelling for erosion produced a higher RA prevalence estimate (78% versus 70%). Although there was only weak agreement between surrogate and real data, the use of the surrogate data provided good to very good agreement between the approaches in categorizing subjects as RA positive (kappa = 0.61-0.72). CONCLUSION: Over 5 years, the 2 formats of the ACR criteria for RA performed similarly, with no important differences between them. The use of surrogates for missing radiologic and serologic data did not have any major influence on disease classification. Although the RA criteria were not originally derived from subjects with early disease in a population setting, this study shows that the use of the decision tree approach with the option of substituting clinical surrogates for missing laboratory data is an appropriate alternative to the conventional list approach. | |
15850993 | Physical examination and laboratory tests in the management of patients with rheumatoid ar | 2005 May | OBJECTIVES: To develop recommendations for the physical and laboratory-test follow-up of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) seen in everyday practice, using evidence from the literature, supplemented with expert opinion when needed. METHODS: A scientific committee selected 7-10 questions using the Delphi consensus procedure. Evidence-based responses to each question were sought in the literature and were then used by a panel to develop recommendations. To fill in gaps in knowledge from the literature, the panelists relied on their personal opinion. RESULTS: The seven questions dealt with the physical and laboratory-test follow-up of RA and the factors predicting disease severity. The literature review identified 799 articles whose title and abstract suggested relevance to the study. Elimination of articles that provided no data on the study topic left 128 original articles. The panel developed seven recommendations, one for each question, which were accepted by consensus. CONCLUSION: Recommendations about the physical and laboratory-test follow-up of patients with RA seen in everyday practice were developed. Because they constitute an objective foundation built by consensus among experts, should improve the uniformity and quality of care provided to RA patients in everyday practice. | |
16782558 | Inflammation: a pivotal link between autoimmune diseases and atherosclerosis. | 2006 May | Premature coronary heart disease has emerged as a major cause of morbidity and mortality in systemic autoimmune diseases. Recent epidemiologic and pathogenesis studies have suggested a great deal in common between the pathogenesis of prototypic autoimmune disease such as rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and that of atherosclerosis. Some of the most remarkable data in support of a link between autoimmunity and atherosclerosis comes from epidemiological studies of patients with autoimmune disorders (RA and SLE). Many epidemiologic observations have linked systemic inflammation with the cardiovascular events in autoimmune disease such as RA and SLE. Inflammation is increasingly being considered central to the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis and an important risk factor for vascular disease. Systemic inflammation may be regarded as accelerating the atherosclerotic process. Systemic levels of soluble inflammatory mediators such as C-reactive protein (CRP) have been associated with cardiovascular risk in the general population. CRP, or more specifically high sensitivity-hsCRP, is a marker of systemic inflammation that has been identified as a valid biomarker of cardiovascular risk. Furthermore, the immunomodulatory and anti-inflammatory actions of statins may affect their utility in the context of chronic inflammatory autoimmune disease. Thus, effective control or dampening of inflammation, with such agents, should be included in the therapeutic armamentarium of autoimmune diseases with the aim of protecting against cardiovascular disease. | |
15742431 | A randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled clinical trial of LY333013, a selective i | 2005 Mar | OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of a selective inhibitor of secretory phospholipase (sPLA2), LY333013, in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA). METHODS: Two hundred and fifty-one patients with active RA despite treatment with one or more disease modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARD) received oral doses of LY333013 (50, 250, and 1000 mg) or placebo once daily for 12 weeks. Concomitant low-dose glucocorticoids (< or = 10 mg/day prednisone equivalent) were allowed. Clinical improvement was assessed using the response criteria of the American College of Rheumatology (ACR20), and safety was evaluated with respect to adverse events and laboratory test abnormalities. RESULTS: The demographic characteristics of the treatment groups were similar. Dose-response relationships were found for ACR20 responses (p = 0.058) and reductions in C-reactive protein (p = 0.058) at week 1. The proportions of patients with an ACR20 response subsequently increased in all study groups including the placebo group at weeks 4 and 8, and the initial treatment benefit was lost. Adverse events were generally mild in severity and not associated with treatment. CONCLUSION: Treatment with LY333013 for 12 weeks was well tolerated but ineffective as an adjunct to DMARD treatment of active RA. | |
16991062 | [Simultaneous bilateral total knee arthroplasty in patients with rheumatoid arthritis]. | 2006 Sep | AIM: In the event of destruction of both knee joints, is bilateral total arthroplasty a reliable operation that the patient can reasonably be expected to undergo? METHOD: In 140 patients [35 men, 105 women, average age 48.6 (range 24-78) years], a bilateral sequential TEP implantation was performed under one anaesthesia session, due to verified destruction of both knee joints (Larsen stage III-IV). All patients were treated with a cemented surface replacement prosthesis with resurfacing of the patella (Duracon Total Knee System, Stryker/Howmedica). Functional assessment was done with the aid of the Lysholm score preoperatively as well as 6, 12 and 18 months postoperatively. RESULTS: The operation was conducted under one anaesthesia session in all patients. The average Lysholm scores improved from 26 (19-45) preoperatively, to 72 (49-81) 6 months postoperatively, 76 (48-85) 12 months postoperatively and 77 (49-87) 18 months postoperatively, whereby no significant difference between sides was observed. 96% of the patients said that they would undergo the operation again. The following complications occurred: 6 prosthesis infections (2.1%), 2 aseptic loosenings (0.7%), 8 superficial wound healing disorders (2.9%) and 2 deep vein thromboses (0.7%). CONCLUSION: Sequential bilateral total knee arthroplasty under one anaesthesia session in patients with rheumatoid arthritis facilitates a much quicker rehabilitation, while the overall perioperative risk is not increased. |