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1.
Arthritis Rheumatol ; 2024 May 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38801195

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to evaluate the influence of anti-infliximab (IFX) antibodies on three different points of care: response/tolerance to IFX, tapering strategy, and in a subsequent treatment with a second tumor necrosis factor inhibitor (TNFi). METHODS: A prospective cohort of 60 patients with radiographic axial spondyloarthritis who received IFX were evaluated retrospectively regarding clinical/laboratorial data, IFX levels, and anti-IFX antibodies at baseline, after 6, 12 to 14, 22 to 24, 48 to 54, 96 to 102 weeks, and before tapering or switching. RESULTS: Anti-IFX antibodies were detected in 27 patients (45%), of whom 23 (85.1%) became positive in the first year of IFX treatment. In comparison to the group that was negative for anti-IFX antibodies, patients who were positive for anti-IFX antibodies demonstrated the following: less use of methotrexate as a concomitant treatment to IFX (5 [18.5%] vs 14 [42.4%]; P = 0.048), more infusion reactions at 22 to 24 weeks (P = 0.020) and 48 to 54 weeks (P = 0.034), more treatment failures (P = 0.028) at 48 to 54 weeks, reduced overall IFX survival (P < 0.001), and lower sustained responses (P = 0.044). Of note, patients who were positive for anti-IFX antibodies exhibited a shorter tapering survival (9.9 months [95% confidence interval (CI) 4.0-15.8] vs 63.4 months [95% CI 27.9-98.8]; P = 0.004) in comparison with patients who were negative for anti-IFX antibodies. Conversely, for patients who failed IFX, patients who were positive for anti-IFX antibodies had better clinical response to the second TNFi at three months (15 [83.3%] vs 3 [27.3%]; P = 0.005) and six months (15 [83.3%] vs 4 [36.4%]; P = 0.017) than the patients who were negative for anti-IFX antibodies after switching. CONCLUSION: This study provided novel data that anti-IFX antibodies is a parameter for reduced tapering survival, reinforcing its detection to guide clinical decision. Additionally, we confirmed in a long-term cohort the anti-IFX antibody association with worse IFX performance and as predictor of the second TNFi good clinical response.

2.
Rev. bras. reumatol ; 37(5): 267-70, set.-out. 1997.
Artigo em Português | LILACS | ID: lil-210176

RESUMO

A coréia de Sydenham, descrita em 1685 por Thomas Sydenham, caracteriza-se pelo aparecimento de movimentos involuntários arrítmicos, hipotonia muscular e é, por vezes, acompanhada de distúrbios psicológicos. Já no século XIX a coréia de Sydenham foi associada a infecçäo estreptocócica prévia e é considerada atualmente uma das manifestaçöes maiores da febre reumática. Anticorpos antineuronais säo descritos em 46 por cento dos casos e especula-se que possam representar reaçäo cruzada às membranas do Streptococcus do grupo A. Episódios recorrentes säo observados em 20-30 por cento dos casos. Tratamento sintomático com neurolépticos ou ácido valpróico é recomendado em pacientes incapacitados


Assuntos
Coreia , Febre Reumática , Streptococcus/citologia
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