In rheumatoid arthritis (RA), low-dose glucocorticoid (GC) therapy has a well-established effect on disease activity. Particularly in early RA, robust evidence demonstrates that GC treatment in association with standard disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (DMARDs) is effective in inducing high remission rates, earlier and more persistently. Despite international recommendations that discourage long-term concomitant GC use, the majority of the clinical trials and observational registries on biologic agents include a high proportion (up to 80%) of patients in treatment with GC. From an analysis of the literature, a substantial lack of reliable information about the efficacy of GC in association with biologic agents emerges; in particular, the role of GC co-therapy in sustaining remission after biological therapy discontinuation remains to be clarified. Given the increasing prevalence of patients in sustained remission, a rational discontinuation strategy should include low-dose GCs in the experimental design to elucidate their role in inducing and maintaining biologic-free remission, for efficacy, safety and pharmacoeconomic considerations.

Caporali, R., Scire', C., Todoerti, M., Montecucco, C. (2013). The role of low-dose glucocorticoids for rheumatoid arthritis in the biologic era. CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RHEUMATOLOGY, 31(4 Suppl 78), 9-13.

The role of low-dose glucocorticoids for rheumatoid arthritis in the biologic era

SCIRE', Carlo Alberto
Secondo
;
2013

Abstract

In rheumatoid arthritis (RA), low-dose glucocorticoid (GC) therapy has a well-established effect on disease activity. Particularly in early RA, robust evidence demonstrates that GC treatment in association with standard disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (DMARDs) is effective in inducing high remission rates, earlier and more persistently. Despite international recommendations that discourage long-term concomitant GC use, the majority of the clinical trials and observational registries on biologic agents include a high proportion (up to 80%) of patients in treatment with GC. From an analysis of the literature, a substantial lack of reliable information about the efficacy of GC in association with biologic agents emerges; in particular, the role of GC co-therapy in sustaining remission after biological therapy discontinuation remains to be clarified. Given the increasing prevalence of patients in sustained remission, a rational discontinuation strategy should include low-dose GCs in the experimental design to elucidate their role in inducing and maintaining biologic-free remission, for efficacy, safety and pharmacoeconomic considerations.
Editoriale, introduzione, contributo a forum/dibattito
Antirheumatic Agents; Arthritis; Rheumatoid; Biological Products; Drug Administration Schedule; Drug Therapy; Combination; Glucocorticoids; Humans; Recurrence; Remission Induction; Treatment Outcome
English
2013
31
4 Suppl 78
9
13
reserved
Caporali, R., Scire', C., Todoerti, M., Montecucco, C. (2013). The role of low-dose glucocorticoids for rheumatoid arthritis in the biologic era. CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RHEUMATOLOGY, 31(4 Suppl 78), 9-13.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/342204
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