Rheumatoid Arthritis: Mendes A

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A digest of articles written 1999 and later, on the topic "Arthritis, Rheumatoid," originating from Planet Earth —» Mendes A.  Display:  All Citations ·  All Abstracts
1 Article [Is the response to anti-TNFalpha treatment influenced by the presence of IgM rheumatoid factor, in Rheumatoid Arthritis patients?] free! 2008

Mourão AF, Santos FP, Falcão S, Barros R, Pinto TL, Mendes A, Castelão W, Nero P, Fonseca JE, Matos AA, Branco JC. · Serviço de Reumatologia do Centro Hospitalar de Lisboa Ocidental (CHLO), EPE, Hospital Egas Moniz, Lisboa, Portugal. · Acta Reumatol Port. · Pubmed #19078861 links to  free full text

Abstract: AIM: To verify if the response to TNFalpha inhibitors is influenced by the presence of IgM rheumatoid factor (RF), in patients with RA. MATERIAL AND METHODS: In this study, the patients with the diagnosis of RA treated with TNFa inhibitors followed in our hospital were recruited. A protocol was applied including demographic, clinical and laboratory data, in order to calculate DAS 28. The presence/absence of IgM RF and associated therapies were record. RESULTS: Fifty-seven patients, 52 female, with a mean duration of anti-TNFa treatment of 30,9+/-15,9 months were studied. Twenty-four patients were being treated with infliximab, 17 with adalimumab and 16 with etanercept. Forty-one patients had IgM RF detectable in serum (RF positive group). In the RF positive group, the variation of DAS 28 was -1,75 +/- 1,53 vs -1,04 +/- 1,76 in the RF negative group (p=0,135). The mean duration of anti-TNFalpha treatment was similar in both groups (31,9+/-15,9 vs 29,5+/-16,16 months). Patients who were treated with methotrexate presented a higher variation of DAS 28 (-1,87 +/- 1,70 vs -0,80 +/- 1,09; p=0,041) and this variation was dose dependent (p=0,056). CONCLUSIONS: Despite needing a replication in a larger cohort, our results suggest that the presence of IgM RF in the serum did not interfere with the response to treatment with TNFalpha inhibitors.

2 Article Noninherited maternal antigens do not increase the susceptibility for familial rheumatoid arthritis. European Consortium on Rheumatoid Arthritis Families (ECRAF). 2001

Barrera P, Balsa A, Alves H, Westhovens R, Maenaut K, Cornélis F, Fritz P, Bardin T, Ceu Maia M, Lopes-Vaz A, Pascual Salcedo D, de la Concha E, Radstake T, van de Putte LB, Migliorini P, Prudhomme JF, Charron D, Spyropoulou M, Mendes A, Spaepen M, Martinez M, Stavropoulos C, Anonymous00238. · Department of Rheumatology, University Hospital, Nijmegen, The Netherlands. · J Rheumatol. · Pubmed #11361224 No free full text.

Abstract: OBJECTIVE: It has been proposed that noninherited maternal HLA-DR antigens (NIMA) might play a role in the susceptibility for rheumatoid arthritis (RA). This hypothesis has not been thoroughly tested in patients with familial RA, in whom genetic factors, either inherited or not, might have stronger influence than in patients with sporadic RA. We investigated the NIMA hypothesis in a large cohort of European patients with familial RA. METHODS: The distribution of NIMA, noninherited paternal antigens (NIPA), and inherited HLA-DR antigens was assessed in patients with familial RA from all family sets collected from 1996 onwards by the ECRAF. HLA-DRB1 oligotyping from patients and all available nonaffected siblings and parents was carried out. Familial RA was defined by the presence of at least 2 affected first-degree relatives in the same family. The frequencies of HLA-DR NIMA and NIPA were compared using odds ratios after stratification for HLA-DR*04, *0401, and/or *0404 and shared epitope (SE) status. NIMA/NIPA that coincided with inherited parental HLA-DR antigens were considered redundant and were excluded from analysis. RESULTS: NIMA and NIPA could be analyzed in 165 RA patients with familial RA and 84 nonaffected siblings. Patients were predominantly female, rheumatoid factor positive, and had erosive disease (81, 75, and 84%, respectively). Possession of HLA-DR*04 and *0401/*0404 alleles tended be more frequent in patients than in nonaffected siblings but this did not reach statistical significance. SE possession was similar in patients and healthy siblings, although the former had a double dose SE more often (37.6 vs 17.8%; p = 0.002). Transmission of SE encoding alleles from parents to offspring was skewed only in patients [OR (95% CI) 3.56 (2.55-4.95) vs 1.16 (0.75-1.79) in nonaffected siblings]. Using the NIPA as control, the frequencies of HLA-DRB1*04, *0401/*0404, and SE positive NIMA were not increased in patients lacking these susceptibility alleles. The frequencies of NIMA encoding susceptibility alleles in DR*04 and *0401/*0404 negative patients were lower than in nonaffected siblings. CONCLUSION: Our results corroborate the association between RA and inherited SE alleles and do not support a role for noninherited HLA-DR maternal antigens in the susceptibility for familial RA.

3 Article Noninherited maternal antigens do not play a role in rheumatoid arthritis susceptibility in Europe. European Consortium on Rheumatoid Arthritis Families. free! 2000

Barrera P, Balsa A, Alves H, Westhovens R, Maenaut K, Cornélis F, Fritz P, Bardin T, de Almeida G, Lopes-Vaz A, Pascual Salcedo D, de la Concha EG, Radstake TR, van de Putte LB, Migliorini P, Prud'homme JF, Charron D, Spyropoulou M, Mendes A, Spaepen M, Martinez M, Lepage V, Stravopoulos C. · Department of Rheumatology, University Hospital, Nijmegen, The Netherlands. · Arthritis Rheum. · Pubmed #10765920 links to  free full text

Abstract: OBJECTIVE: It has been proposed that noninherited maternal antigens (NIMA) (HLA-DR antigens) might play a role in susceptibility to rheumatoid arthritis (RA), especially in patients who are not genetically predisposed, such as those who are HLA-DR4 and/or shared epitope (SE) negative. The present study was undertaken to test the NIMA hypothesis in a large cohort of European RA patients assembled by the European Consortium on RA Families (ECRAF). METHODS: HLA-DRB1 oligotyping was performed in families of European RA patients for whom both parents were alive. These families were consecutively recruited by the ECRAF between 1996 and 1998, for association studies. The frequencies of HLA-DR NIMA were compared with those of the noninherited paternal antigens (NIPA) after stratification for HLA-DR*04, *0401 and/or *0404, and SE status. NIMA or NIPA that coincided with inherited HLA-DR antigens were considered redundant and excluded from analysis. Calculations concerning the whole group and restricted to patients lacking parental RA were performed. RESULTS: One hundred seventy families from France (n = 81), Belgium (n = 23), Spain (n = 24), Italy (n = 19), Portugal (n = 14), and The Netherlands (n = 9) were oligotyped. The group of probands was predominantly female (88%), positive for rheumatoid factor, DR*04, and SE (71%, 58%, and 75%, respectively), and had erosive disease (75%). Parental RA was reported in 21 families. Using the NIPA as control, the frequency of HLA-DRB1*04, *0401 and/or *0404-, or SE-positive NIMA was not found to be increased in patients lacking these susceptibility alleles. The same was true when the 21 probands with parental RA were excluded from analysis. In DRB1*04-positive patients, we found no evidence of a relevant effect of HLA-DR3 or DR6 in the NIMA. CONCLUSION: Our results do not support the notion that noninherited maternal antigens have a role in susceptibility to RA in the offspring.