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Taltz Shines in Non-Radiographic Axial Spondyloarthritis
Ixekizumab (IXE), an interleukin-17A (IL-17A) inhibitor, was recently approved for use in ankylosing spondylitis (also known as radiographic axial spondyloarthritis- axSpA).
Read ArticleRheumNow Podcast - 2019 Rheumatology Year in Review
Dr. Jack Cush reviews highlights from 2019 on RheumNow.com. Topics covered in this annual review include: superheroes lost; venous thromboembolic events and JAKs; free medical tuition; women in rheumatology; 52 new drug approvals in 2019 and 330 drugs with a 2020 price hike; scleroderma disappointments; novel new treatments and newer tests; the boom of Shingrix; RheumNow.Live - and more.
Read ArticleBest of 2019 - Is Methotrexate Necessary with Tofacitinib?
Rheumatoid arthritis patients taking tofacitinib (Xeljanz) plus methotrexate who achieved low disease activity (LDA) may be able to withdraw from the latter agent without significant worsening of disease activity, a researcher reported at EULAR 2019 in Madrid.
Read ArticleBest of 2019 - War on RA - Part 1: Walk on the Moon
It’s a great time to be a rheumatologist and to manage RA. But, if you keep doing what you’re doing, you’re going to keep getting what you’ve got.
Read ArticleBest of 2019 - Biologic Safety Guidelines from the British Society for Rheumatology
In the United Kingdom, NICE has looked to the British Society of Rheumatology (BSR) to develop evidence based guidance on the safe use of biologic DMARDs in patients with inflammatory arthritis.
Read ArticleBest of 2019 - Ups and Downs with Abatacept
Two recent studies have examined the effect of starting abatacept upon the risk of serious hospitalized infections or cancer, showing divergent results from claims data analyses.
Read ArticleBest of 2019 - War on RA - Part 3: Useless Drugs
We have options that are endless – we have 28 biologics in rheumatology; 19 approved for RA in the last 20 years, but 15 of these are me-too copies or biosimilars. We currently have 2 JAK inhibitors and may have 3 or 4 by year end. But what we really need is the right drug, at the right time, in the right patient – but how will we know.
Read ArticleClaims data from RA patients (n = 12,182), shows that screening for hyperlipidemia was suboptimal (compared to Diabetes pts), Those seeing a PCP and Rheum were 36% more likely to be screened. https://t.co/j661loTDGk
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From the 9/11 World Trade Center registry, 118 persons found w/ a CTD (RA=71, Sjӧgrens 22, SLE 20, myositis 9,MCTD 7, PSS 4. Responders w/ intense dust cloud exposure had 2 fold CTD risk & Community members w/ PTSD had 3‐fold risk. https://t.co/07GhloezNA
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Study of 182 hospitalized adult-onset Still's disease patients shows predictive factors for developing macrophage activation syndrome to include: 1. Splenomegaly (OR 5.7), 2. pericarditis (OR 6.5), and 3. ferritin >2000 (OR 4.7). https://t.co/CNcIDrbU77
Dr. John Cush RheumNow ( View Tweet)
Dr. John Cush RheumNow ( View Tweet)
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