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Researchers Probe the Role of Fat Cells in Inflammation

Thomas R. Collins  |  September 20, 2018

AMSTERDAM—It’s been many years since adipose tissue came to be appreciated not just as a store of energy, but also as a regulator of metabolism and an important player in immune function. Rheumatology researchers continue to drill down into the role of fat cells in the search for mechanisms that could reveal targets for the…

Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients on Biologics Remain At Risk of Infection

Thomas R. Collins  |  September 20, 2018

AMSTERDAM—With new therapies coming into the marketplace, researchers are working to tease out the risk of infection for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients. Existing data suggest the risk of infections—even fatal ones—is real. But over time, improvements have taken hold, particularly for tuberculosis, according to an infectious disease expert at EULAR: the Annual European Congress of…

Trial Data Reveals the Limitations of Steroids in Giant Cell Arteritis Therapy

Thomas R. Collins  |  September 20, 2018

AMSTERDAM—Just how seldom prednisone is successful at inducing remission in giant cell arteritis (GCA), despite such a long history of use for the disease, is one of the many lessons to emerge from the data in the GiACTA trial, said the principal investigator of the trial, which is the largest ever in GCA and is…

Researchers Release Proposed Lupus Criteria, & Pathogenesis Findings

Thomas R. Collins  |  September 20, 2018

AMSTERDAM—Newly proposed systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) classification criteria and new findings on SLE pathogenesis are two ways in which researchers and clinicians are getting a better grasp on the heterogeneous disease. The criteria and findings were discussed this June in a session at EULAR: the Annual European Congress of Rheumatology. ‘Paradigm Shift’ Sindhu Johnson, MD,…

Researchers Fight Cellular Senescence, Low-Grade Inflammation

Thomas R. Collins  |  September 20, 2018

AMSTERDAM—Low-grade inflammation in older adults can impede immune responsiveness, and researchers have shed light on how this happens. They have developed a short-term treatment that blocks inflammation and boosts the immune response, an expert said at EULAR: the Annual European Congress of Rheumatology. The findings were presented in a session on cellular senescence related to…

Researchers Work Toward Early ID & Treatment of Rheumatoid Arthritis

Thomas R. Collins  |  September 20, 2018

AMSTERDAM—Early identification and treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) are two of the most pressing concerns in the field, an expert said at EULAR: the Annual European Congress of Rheumatology. He described the latest efforts to identify patients at risk of RA development and insights on quick referral to rheumatologists. Karim Raza, BM, BCh, PhD, Arthritis…

Placebos: Their Underappreciated Impact in Pharmaceutical Trials

Placebos: Their Underappreciated Impact in Pharmaceutical Trials

Terence W. Starz, MD, Theodore Pincus, MD, On Behalf Of The ARHP Practice Committee  |  September 20, 2018

Sir William Osler, the father of modern medicine, said “the desire to take medicine is perhaps the greatest feature that separates man from animal.” Determination of the benefit of a medication can be challenging and includes a number of factors, such as pharmacologic activities on the disease pathophysiology, pharmacokinetic properties and patient characteristics.1,2 An additional,…

A 46-Year Study Traces the Lupus Death Rate from 1968–2013

Kurt Ullman  |  September 20, 2018

A study published in Annals of Internal Medicine in December 2017 looked at trends in lupus mortality over a 46-year period. The researchers say they set out to close some knowledge gaps. “There [was] a knowledge gap relating to the large differences we see in death rates from one study to another, which could have…

Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors & Immune-Related Adverse Events

Priya Chokshi, MD, Roberta Seidman, MD, Noah Levit, PhD, MD, & Steven E. Carsons, MD  |  September 20, 2018

Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are at the forefront of advances in cancer therapy and have shown promising results for progression-free survival. Checkpoint signaling pathways, such as cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen 4 (CTLA-4) and programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1), normally regulate the immune response to promote self-tolerance and prevent tissue damage and inflammation. PD-1 is a…

New Research Shows Knee Osteoarthritis Prevalence Is Rising

Mary Beth Nierengarten  |  September 20, 2018

Studies highlighting the large numbers of people affected by knee osteoarthritis (OA) point to what clinicians who treat knee OA have been seeing for the past few decades: a substantial increase in the prevalence of knee OA in the U.S. and globally. Roughly 250 million people are affected by knee OA worldwide, and about 14…

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