Search for: rheumatoid arthritis    methotrexate    autoimmune disease    biomarker    gene expression    GWAS    HLA genes    non-HLA genes   

ID PMID Title PublicationDate abstract
18466535 Modeling the effect of PTPN22 in rheumatoid arthritis. 2007 In order to model the effect of PTPN22 on rheumatoid arthritis (RA), we determined the combination of single-nucleotide-polymorphisms (SNPs) showing the strongest association with RA. Three SNPs (rs2476601-rs12730735-rs11102685) were selected for which we estimated the genotypic relative risks (GRRs) of the corresponding genotypes. On the basis of these GRRs we defined four at-risk genotypic classes. Relative to the class of reference risk, individuals had a risk approximately multiplied by two, three, or four. This classification was confirmed by the excess of identity-by-descent (IBD) sharing (IBD = 2) for the sibs of an index in the high-risk class and by excess of non-IBD sharing (IBD = 0) when the index belonged to the low-risk class. The observed data could not be explained by the role of a single variant but were compatible either with a joint effect of the three typed SNPs of PTPN22 on RA or with the role of two untyped variants.
17280636 [Treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) with anti-TNF-alpha antibody (Remicade). Individua 2007 Jan 29 Remicade/infliximab is effective in rheumatoid arthritis (RA), but response failure is frequent. Sera from 106 RA patients were monitored using an RIA for functional infliximab and an RIA for anti-infliximab antibody (Ab). S-infliximab varied considerably, e.g. 0-22 microg/ml before the 3rd infusion, and 44% were Ab-positive after 6 months. Low s-infliximab was associated with Ab development and later therapeutic failure, and high Ab levels could be related to dose increases, side-effects and cessation of therapy. Pharmacological monitoring should help optimize anti-TNF therapies.
17590174 IgM plays an important role in induction of collagen-induced arthritis. 2007 Sep IgM is one major type of B cell receptor (BCR) expressed on most of the B cells from immature to mature stages. During normal B cell ontogeny, signals transduced through the IgM BCR play an important role in regulating B cell maturation and survival at multiple checkpoints. In addition, IgM BCR is also required for antigen-dependent differentiation and activation of B cells. However, whether IgM BCR-mediated signalling is important for the pathogenesis of autoimmune diseases remains elusive. Using IgM-deficient mice, we examined the effect of absence of IgM on the development of collagen-induced arthritis (CIA), an animal model of rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Compared to their wild-type littermates, IgM-deficient mice were either resistant to arthritis induction or developed significantly less severe arthritis. There was a significant decrease of autoantibody production in IgM-deficient mice, particularly IgG2a antibodies, which is believed to be pathogenic in CIA. Thus, although IgM(-/-) mice have relatively normal B cell development with IgD BCR replacing IgM BCR, the absence of IgM-mediated signals has a profound impact on the development of CIA, indicating that IgM plays an important role in the development and pathogenesis of autoimmune arthritis and IgM-mediated signalling is critical in the generation of pathogenic autoreactive antibodies.
16151812 Clinical, laboratory and genetic markers associated with erosions and remission in patient 2006 Apr We investigated the relationship between clinical, laboratory and genetic markers and outcome measures in 159 patients with recent onset of inflammatory arthritis (IA). The majority of patients were managed in community-based rheumatology practice. Median duration of arthritis at baseline was 3 months with median follow-up of 4.0 years (range 0-10). Markers of disease activity and 1987 ACR criteria for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) were estimated every 6 months for the first 2 years and annually thereafter. Presence of shared epitopes (SE) was established by PCR-based method. Main outcome variables were attainment of remission and presence of erosions on X-rays of hands and feet at 3 years. Remission was seen in 34.3% of patients and was independently related to age 60 and older (odds ratio (OR) 3.2; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.2-8.7) and inversely to the presence of rheumatoid factor (RF) (OR 8.3; 95% CI, 3.2-21.3 for persistent arthritis). Patients with two SE were likely to have persistent arthritis (P=0.006), but this was not significant when corrected for RF. Independent predictors for erosions at 3 years were RF (OR 7.5; 95% CI, 1.9-29.5) and area under the curve for number of swollen joints (OR 1.08; 95% CI, 1.02-1.16). SE status was not predictive of erosions at 3 years (OR 1.6; 95% CI, 0.7-3.7). In univariate analysis, patients possessing DERAA motif on DRB1 were less likely to have erosive disease than without this motif at 4 years (OR 0.21; 95% CI, 0.0-0.9, P=0.037) but this finding was partly explained by adjusting for RF (adjusted OR 0.24; 95% CI 0.04-1.37). In this study of recent onset IA, active disease and RF were associated with poor outcome. Whilst SE did not predict erosive disease, patients with DERAA motif may be protected against erosions whilst the presence of two SE alleles suggests persistence of arthritis.
17001249 Case report: biceps tenosynovial rice bodies. 2006 Nov Here we report the first documented case of rice body formation within the biceps tenosynovium in a patient with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. We discuss the pathophysiology and the clinical and radiographic findings and correlate these to prior case studies. Lastly, we suggest that limited awareness is a barrier in achieving a timely diagnosis and appropriate management.
22478708 Rheumatoid arthritis: prevalence, economics, and implications for payers and purchasers. 2008 Jul Prevalence of disease, economics of care, and implications for payers, as told in charts.
17261171 Antibody-mediated delivery of IL-10 inhibits the progression of established collagen-induc 2007 The antibody-mediated targeted delivery of cytokines to sites of disease is a promising avenue for cancer therapy, but it is largely unexplored for the treatment of chronic inflammatory conditions. Using both radioactive and fluorescent techniques, the human monoclonal antibodies L19 and G11 (specific to two markers of angiogenesis that are virtually undetectable in normal adult tissues) were found to selectively localize at arthritic sites in the murine collagen-induced model of rheumatoid arthritis following intravenous (i.v.) administration. The same animal model was used to study the therapeutic action of the L19 antibody fused to the cytokines IL-2, tumour necrosis factor (TNF) and IL-10. Whereas L19-IL-2 and L19-TNF treatment led to increased arthritic scores and paw swellings, the fusion protein L19-IL-10 displayed a therapeutic activity, which was superior to the activity of IL-10 fused to an antibody of irrelevant specificity in the mouse. The anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 has been investigated for the treatment of patients with rheumatoid arthritis, but clinical development plans have been discontinued because of a lack of efficacy. Because the antigen recognised by L19 is strongly expressed at sites of arthritis in humans and identical in both mice and humans, it suggests that the fusion protein L19-IL-10 might help overcome some of the clinical limitations of IL-10 and provide a therapeutic benefit to patients with chronic inflammatory disorders, including arthritis.
18239790 Nitroxide synthase activities at different stages of adjuvant arthritis. 2007 May The location and activities of nitric oxide synthases in synovial cells during different stages of inflammatory process were studied by the immunocytochemical method in animals with experimental rheumatoid arthritis. Direct involvement of the NOergic mechanisms in the development of adjuvant arthritis was demonstarted.
19093436 Role for leptin and prolactin in human juvenile rheumatic diseases. 2007 Jun 15 This study was done to evaluate the relation between the level ofleptin, prolactin, IL-4 and IL-5 with the activity of Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) and Lupus erythematosus (SLE). The study included 33 patients divided into two groups. Group 1 included twenty-one patients with Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (13 males and 8 females) with age 11.9 +/- 3.6 years and twelve patients with systemic lupus erythematosus were enrolled as group 2 (2 males and 10 females) with age 15.8 +/- 2.9 years. Twenty-one healthy children with matched age, sex and anthropometrics measures were included in the study to serve as control group (group 3). There were significant increases in the levels of Leptin (<0.038), Prolactin (p < 0.021) IL-4 (p < 0.005) in Juvenile Rheumatoid Arthritis group with insignificant decrease in IL-5 (p < 0.724) in comparison to control group. Systemic Lupus group show a significant increase in level of Leptin (p < 0.05), Prolactin (p < 0.02) and IL-4 (p < 0.000) with an insignificant increase in IL-5 (p < 0.685) in comparison to control group. RA patients show a positive significant correlation between Prolactin, IL-5 and activity with negative insignificant correlation between IL-4 and activity. Where in Lupus patients there was a positive significant correlation between Prolactin, IL-4 and activity with negative insignificant correlation between IL-5 and activity. There was no correlation between Leptin and activity in both diseases (RA, SLE). There's a highly significant positive correlation between serum Leptin levels and BMI among all patients of RA and Lupus (p < 0.000, p < 0.003), respectively. There was a difference in the Leptin level between male and female patients with a significant increase in the female than male (p < 0.05). We can conclude from our results that Leptin cannot be used to assess disease activity in RA and SLE where Prolactin can be used to assess disease activity in RA and SLE.
18394318 Anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide antibodies in patients affected by HCV-related arthritis 2008 Jan Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) infection can induce immunological disorders with different clinical expressions such as arthritis, Sjogren Syndrome and various forms of vasculitis. Retrospectively, the prevalence of anti-Cyclic Citrullinated peptide antibodies (anti-CCP) in a group of patients affected by HCV-related arthritis with positivity for Rheumatoid Factor (RF) and the eventual correlations with RF and/or Anti-Nuclear Antibodies (ANA) and articular involvement were studied. Thirty patients with arthritis were selected from a population of 380 subjects affected by HCV infection. Each patient was evaluated by clinical examination (23 denoted poliarticular and 7 mono-oligoarticular involvement), by X-graphic aspects of joint involvement (8 patients presented joint erosions), by ANA, RF and anti-CCP positivity. Ten of the HCV-related arthritis patients (33.3 percent) presented positivity for anti-CCP, without significant correlation between such parameter and ANA, RF and articular involvement. Anti-CCP resulted positive in 4 out of the 8 patients with joint erosions, and only in 6 out of the 22 patients without joint erosions. Such frequencies analyzed by chi square resulted with no significant differences. Our patients presented an interesting prevalence of the positivity for anti-CCP. These data are cause to consider the specificity recently attributed to this parameter in the diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis.
16758503 Radiographic and clinical outcome in early juvenile rheumatoid arthritis and juvenile spon 2006 Jul OBJECTIVE: To describe radiographic findings at disease onset and 3-year followup in patients with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (JRA) and juvenile spondyloarthropathy (JSpA), to assess radiographic progression and its predictors, and to prospectively assess clinical outcome and predictors of persistent disease at 3-year followup. METHODS: A total of 197 patients with JRA/JSpA were examined every 6 months for 3 years. Radiographic examination was performed at baseline and 3-year followup of knees and ankles (all patients) and of other joints on clinical indication. Remission was defined as minimum 6 months without medication and no clinical signs of active disease. RESULTS: Radiographic abnormalities were found in 88% of the patients at onset and in 81% after 3 years. Frequency of swelling/osteoporosis decreased and frequency of abnormal growth increased from baseline to followup. Knees, hands, and wrists had most frequently radiographic abnormalities. Radiographic progression occurred in 38% of the patients. Joints with swelling/osteoporosis on radiographs, young age, and a large number of mobility-restricted joints at baseline were predictors of radiographic progression. At 3 years, 26% of the patients were in remission and 75% had been treated with disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs. Reduced well-being, a large number of active joints and negative antinuclear antibody at baseline were predictors of persistent disease after 3 years. CONCLUSION: After 3 years most patients had radiographic abnormalities and persistent disease. Young age, many affected joints, reduced well-being, and negative antinuclear antibody at onset increased the risk of radiographic progression and persistent disease after 3 years.
17904263 A preliminary study of the effects of an extract of Ligularia fischeri leaves on type II c 2008 Jan The present study was undertaken to determine whether Ligularia fischeri leaf extract (LF) is efficacious against collagen-induced arthritis (CIA) in mice. DBA/1J mice were immunized with bovine type II collagen and treated with LF (100 and 200 mg/kg) for 49 days. Mice were assessed regularly for signs of arthritis and the levels of rheumatoid factor, anti-type II collagen antibody, cytokines, AST, ALT, and creatinine in serum were also examined after the animals were killed. The arthritis score and paw edema were markedly suppressed in the groups treated with LF. Moreover, levels of rheumatoid factor, anti-type II collagen antibody, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, interleukin (IL)-1, and IL-6 in sera were reduced by LF administration. These data suggest that L. fischeri might be effective for the treatment of inflammatory arthritis like human rheumatoid arthritis.
16906782 Adalimumab: in psoriatic arthritis. 2006 Adalimumab, a fully human monoclonal antibody, is a tumour necrosis factor antagonist that has been investigated for efficacy in psoriatic arthritis, based on well-established use of the drug in rheumatoid arthritis. In well-controlled Phase III trials, adalimumab (40 mg administered subcutaneously every other week) has shown efficacy in adult patients with psoriatic arthritis who had an inadequate response to previous treatment with NSAIDs (24-week ADEPT trial; n = 313) or disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (12-week study; n = 100). In these trials, adalimumab recipients experienced a significantly greater improvement in arthritis response (p < 0.001 in the ADEPT trial, and p
17760961 Seroprevalence of parvovirus B19 IgG in children affected by juvenile idiopathic arthritis 2007 Parvovirus (PV) B19 is the causative agent of the childhood disease erythema infectiosum. An association of PV B19 with chronic arthropathies, sometimes resembling rheumatoid arthritis or juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA), has repeatedly been described. Other studies, however, have failed to identify any such relationship. In order to study further whether there is a link between PV B19 and JIA, we determined the prevalence of PV B19 specific IgG antibodies in serum samples from children with rheumatoid diseases and compared it with the prevalence in unaffected children We reasoned that if there is an association between PV B19 and JIA, then the prevalence of PV B19 IgG in the children with JIA should be higher than in the control group. PV B19 IgG status was tested in 406 children with JIA and related diseases, and in 146 children constituting a control group. The percentage of PV B19 IgG positive children was not significantly elevated in the disease subgroups compared with age-matched control groups. In conclusion, our findings do not support the hypothesis that human parvovirus B19 is involved in the pathogenesis of JIA.
17587648 Extremely high serum ferritin levels as diagnostic tool in adult-onset Still's disease. 2007 Jun The diagnosis of adult-onset Still's disease (ASD) is difficult to establish due to the nonspecific clinical and laboratory findings. A markedly raised serum ferritin level is a typical finding, although it is not well understood why ferritin levels are extremely high in ASD. We discuss several possible explanations leading to the extremely high levels of ferritin.
18572281 [Adult-onset Still's disease and hepatic angiosarcoma, a fortuitous association or a paran 2008 Nov Adult-onset Still's disease is a systemic disorder without specific histological feature. Diagnosis requires to rule out any other disorder including neoplasia. Nevertheless, patients with paraneoplastic adult-onset Still's disease have been reported. We report a patient with an adult-onset Still's disease who presented with a liver involvement at onset. Two years later, a liver angiosarcoma was diagnosed. This report underlines the difficulty of the diagnosis of the adult-onset Still's disease even in the presence of Yamaguchi et al.'s [J Rheumatol 19 (1992) 424-30] and Fautrel et al.'s [Medicine 81 (2002) 194-200] classification criteria and may suggest a link between the initial clinical picture and the discovery nearly two years later, of a liver angiosarcoma.
18487968 [Sjögren's syndrome extraglandular expressions]. 2008 Apr The Sjögren's syndrome (SS) is an autoimmune disease which causes injury to lacrimal and salivar glands and is characterized by a potential systemic involvement. The present review will treat mainly of SS extraglandular expressions, focusing on scientific literature articles regarding SS implications in gynecology and obstetrics.
18651060 [Sjögren's syndrome: comparison among the main imaging techniques in the study of major s 2008 Apr Sjögren's syndrome (SS) is a chronic inflammatory disease with an autoimmune etiology, that affects exocrine glands, in particular salivary and lacrimal glands. Among the diagnostic criteria of SS, imaging techniques play an important role. The aim of our study is to compare three imaging techniques, such as sonography, scintigraphy and sialography in the evaluation of major salivary glands. The use of the these techniques is of great importance for the diagnosis of SS. Sonography is the most frequently used for its prompt execution, non invasivity, great acceptance by the patient and low cost. In the diagnostic patient management of SS, sonography results are eventually confirmed by the other imaging techniques, sialography and scintigraphy.
18250136 Do children with lupus have fewer male siblings? 2008 Feb It is widely acknowledged that genetic factors play a significant role in the pathogenesis of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). However, the female preponderance remains unexplained. We hypothesized that the female preponderance in childhood SLE results from selection early in the course of conception against male fetuses bearing genetic material predisposing to SLE. If this hypothesis is accurate, there should be a decreased number of male children in families with a child with SLE. Alternatively, children with SLE would have fewer male siblings. Further, this hypothesis may apply to other diseases with a female predominance such as pauciarticular onset juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (PaJRA), and not apply to diseases without female preponderance such as systemic onset juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (SoJRA). Chart review of patients with childhood onset SLE and PaJRA revealed a greater number of female children in these families compared with families of patients with SoJRA. Large-scale epidemiologic studies with precise counting of miscarriages and abortions could help to confirm these findings. Detailed studies of genetic and maternal intrauterine factors are required to conclusively prove this hypothesis.
18084710 Switching the therapy from etanercept to infliximab in a child with rheumatoid factor posi 2007 Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha)-blocking agents have been used increasingly in the treatment of severe refractory juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA). However, some patients have been forced to discontinue these agents because of the lack of efficacy or adverse events. In these situations, cases of switching from one TNF-blocking agent to another are reported in rheumatoid arthritis, but there are few cases in JIA. This report documents the case of a patient with JIA who improved following a switch from etanercept to infliximab.