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Articles tagged with "Drug Updates"

Guselkumab Promising for Psoriatic Arthritis with Axial Symptoms

Lorraine L. Janeczko  |  July 17, 2021

NEW YORK (Reuters Health)—Guselkumab may be effective in patients who have psoriatic arthritis (PsA) with axial symptoms, a post-hoc analysis of data from two randomized controlled trials suggests.1 “Because PsA is a heterogeneous disease that manifests as various symptoms, treatment choices should involve consideration of all relevant domains of disease for each individual patient,” researchers…

Do Not Get Us Started on Acthar

Do Not Get Us Started on Acthar

Megan Elizabeth Bowles Clowse, MD, MPH & David Leverenz, MD  |  December 17, 2018

As rheumatologists, we have a love-hate relationship with the corticosteroid prednisone, a feeling many of our patients share. It’s our most effective medication to quickly shut down an overactive immune system. When we have a patient with life- or organ-threatening autoimmune disease—severe lupus affecting the kidneys or vasculitis causing hemorrhage in the lungs, for example—large…

Marijuana for Rheumatology Patients?

Larry Beresford  |  February 17, 2018

SAN DIEGO—What does cannabis offer to the treatment and management of rheumatology patients and the range of pain states they experience? What do we really know about its long-term effects? These are hard questions to answer with currently available data and a reality nuanced by complications cannabis advocates don’t always recognize, according to two experts…

Biosimilars: Still Waiting for Promise to Materialize

Larry Beresford  |  January 17, 2018

During the 2017 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting, advances in biosimilar treatments were abuzz. However, many speakers noted that the presence of biosimilars on the market has not yet resulted in greater access to treatment and lower drug pricing in the U.S…

First Biosimilar Drugs Approved in U.S., Canada

Michele B. Kaufman, PharmD, BCGP  |  May 15, 2015

The first biosmilar products have been approved in the U.S. and Canada, following Europe’s early lead. Canada approved its first biosimilar monoclonal antibody (mAb) therapy, known as Inflectra (infliximab), on March 30, 2015.1 In Canada, biosimilars are being called subsequent entry biologic (SEB) agents. Inflectra is approved for treating patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), ankylosing…

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