8 research outputs found

    Challenges in the treatment of Rheumatoid Arthritis

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    Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) is a chronic inflammatory disease characterized by a heterogeneous clinical response to the different treatments. Some patients are difficult to treat and do not reach the treatment targets as clinical remission or low disease activity. Known negative prognostic factors, such as the presence of auto-antiantibodies and joint erosion, the presence of a genetic profile, comorbidities and extra-articular manifestations, pregnancy or a pregnancy wish may concur to the treatment failure. In this review we aimed at identify difficult to treat RA patients and define the optimal therapeutic and environmental targets. Genetic markers of severity such as HLA-DRB1, TRAF1, PSORS1C1 and microRNA 146a are differently associated with joint damage; other gene polymorphisms seem to be associated with response to biologic disease modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (bDMARDs). The presence of comorbidities and/or extra-articular manifestations may influence the therapeutic choice; overweight and obese patients are less responsive to TNF inhibitors. In this context the patient profiling can improve the clinical outcome. Targeting different pathways, molecules, and cells involved in the pathogenesis of RA may in part justify the lack response of some patients. An overview of the future therapeutic targets, including bDMARDs (inhibitors of IL-6, GM-CSF, matrix metalloproteinases, chemokines) and targeted synthetic DMARDs (filgotinib, ABT-494, pefacitinib, decernotinib), and environmental targets is addressed. Environmental factors, such as diet and cigarette smoke, may influence susceptibility to autoimmune diseases and interfere with inflammatory pathways. Mediterranean diet, low salt intake, cocoa, curcumin, and physical activity seem to show beneficial effects, however studies of dose finding, safety and efficacy in RA need to be performed

    Evaluation of alexithymia in patients affected by rheumatoid arthritis and psoriatic arthritis: A cross-sectional study

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    Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and psoriatic arthritis (PsA) are chronic autoimmune diseases leading to joint damage, functional limitation, and disability and are typically associated with several comorbidities. Alexithymia is a personality trait characterized by a disregulation of emotion processing and regulation of emotions that involves a dissociation of emotional and physical responses to life events. A broad association between alexithymia and symptoms as depression, inflammation, and pain has been demonstrated. We aimed at evaluate an association among inflammatory arthritis, as RA and PsA, and alexithymia, and a possible link with clinical characteristics and disease activity.In this cross-sectional study, we enrolled, from January to December 2017, patients affected by RA or PsA referring to the outpatient's clinic of the Rheumatology Unit of the University of Rome Tor Vergata. The 20-item Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS-20) was used to assess alexithymia. Disease activity, function, quality of life, and clinimetric indexes were assessed.A total of 50 RA patients and 51 PsA patients were enrolled. The TAS-20 score showed 38.6% (39/101) patients had alexithymia, 26.7% (27/101) patients were in the borderline of alexithymia and 34.7% (35/101) patients did not have alexithymia. A statistical significant association was observed between alexithymia and inflammatory indices (ESR: P = .029, CRP: P = .043) and between alexithymia and clinimetric parameters (ptVAS, pVAS, GH, P < .0001 for all comparisons). A significant trend of association has been demonstrated between alexithymia and female gender and concomitant steroid therapy. No correlations among variables such as age, duration of disease, and comorbidities and alexithymia status were observed.This study suggests that alexithymia assessment should be a part of the comprehensive management of RA and PsA patients

    The Enigma of Methane on Mars

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    International audienceBetween 2004 and 2012, four independent groups reported detections of low levels (10–60 ppbv) of methane on Mars. If true, these constitute the first observations of a potential biosignature on that planet and would be an important finding and addition to the inventory of minor species in its atmosphere. However, these claims for the presence of methane have been highly controversial. In 2014, the most robust search for methane on Mars was performed by the rover Curiosity. The latest measurements by Curiosity indicate a background CH4 level of 0.2–0.7 ppbv, except during a two-month period between November 2013 and January 2014, when high mixing ratios of around 7 ppbv were observed. These observations immediately raise the question of the origin of methane on Mars, but also pose fundamental challenges to our current understanding of Martian atmospheric physics and chemistry
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