Treatment of rheumatoid arthritis: a global perspective on the use of antirheumatic drugs
Tuulikki Sokka1,2 , Minja Envalds3 , Theodore Pincus4
11 December 2007
29 January 2008
25 April 2008
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Modern therapy for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is based on knowledge of the severity of the natural history of the disease. RA patients are approached with early and aggressive treatment strategies, methotrexate as an anchor drug, biological targeted therapies in those with inadequate response to methotrexate, and “tight control,” aiming for remission and low disease activity according to quantitative monitoring. This chapter presents a rationale for current treatment strategies for RA with antirheumatic drugs, a review of published reports concerning treatments in clinical cohorts outside of clinical trials, and current treatments at 61 sites in 21 countries in the QUEST-RA database.
Rheumatoid arthritis - DMARDs - Methotrexate