Rheumatoid Arthritis: Mouterde G

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A digest of articles written 1999 and later, on the topic "Arthritis, Rheumatoid," originating from Planet Earth —» Mouterde G.  Display:  All Citations ·  All Abstracts
1 Guideline Recommendations of the French Society for Rheumatology regarding TNFalpha antagonist therapy in patients with rheumatoid arthritis. 2007

Fautrel B, Pham T, Mouterde G, Le Loët X, Goupille P, Guillemin F, Ravaud P, Cantagrel A, Dougados M, Puéchal X, Sibilia J, Soubrier M, Mariette X, Combe B, Anonymous00061, Anonymous00062. · Pierre and Marie Curie University - Paris VI, UFR de Médecine, France. · Joint Bone Spine. · Pubmed #18037319 No free full text.

Abstract: OBJECTIVES: To update French Society for Rheumatology guidelines regarding the use of TNFalpha antagonists for treating patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). METHODS: Existing guidelines were updated using the AGREE instrument. Items that required updating were selected by a task force, the relevant literature was critically appraised, and new wording was suggested by a limited committee of experts then validated by the task force and subsequently by a panel of external reviewers. The three-topic structure of the recommendations (indication, initiation, and adjustment) and the final algorithm format were maintained. RESULTS: Of the 12 items, five were selected for updating; one pertained to the indication for treatment with TNFalpha antagonists, two to treatment initiation, and two to treatment adjustment. Of the four initially recommended criteria for determining that TNFalpha antagonist therapy is indicated, the first three were left unchanged (confirmed diagnosis of RA; active disease for more than 1month with objective evidence of inflammation or progressive structural damage, or dependency on glucocorticoid therapy, or progressive radiographic damage; and failure to respond adequately to methotrexate - or another agent when methotrexate is contraindicated - in the optimal tolerated dosage). The fourth and last criterion was modified as follows: co-morbidities should be evaluated in order to distinguish absolute contraindications from relative contraindications that require referral to a specialist. Of the four initial recommendations about TNFalpha antagonist initiation, the first and fourth were left unchanged (a workup should be performed prior to treatment initiation, and the patient should receive regular standardized follow-up); the second and third recommendations were modified as follows: there is no evidence that one TNFalpha antagonist is more effective than the others, and concomitant methotrexate therapy is generally advisable, regardless of the TNFalpha antagonist used. Of the four recommendations about treatment adjustment, the first two were modified as follows: the goal of treatment is to achieve the EULAR response criteria or better; and in non-responders, the dosage or dosing interval can be modified when infliximab is used, methotrexate should be added when the TNFalpha antagonist is used alone, and in all other situations the patient should be switched to a different TNFalpha antagonist. The other two recommendations about treatment adjustment were left unchanged (patients who fail to tolerate one TNFalpha antagonist can be switched to another TNFalpha antagonist if allowed by the nature of the adverse event; and when a remission is achieved, reduction or discontinuation of symptomatic drugs - most notably glucocorticoids - is appropriate, followed in the event of a prolonged remission by changes in the dosage and/or dosing interval of the TNFalpha antagonist or concomitant disease-modifying drug). CONCLUSION: These recommendations are designed to help practitioners optimize the use of TNFalpha antagonists in patients with RA seen in everyday practice. They do not constitute regulations.

2 Review [Contrast-enhanced ultrasound in musculoskeletal diseases] 2009

Mouterde G, Carotti M, D'Agostino MA. · Service de rhumatologie, Hôpital Ambroise Paré, 92100 Boulogne-Billancourt, France. · J Radiol. · Pubmed #19212282 No free full text.

Abstract: Contrast-enhanced US (ultrasonography) can be used for the study of musculoskeletal diseases but this application still belongs to clinical research. Despite a theoretical value for the identification of microvascularity, the technical limitations of musculoskeletal US are challenging the use of contrast enhanced US. This can explain the slow development of this application and the reason why it remained limited to the assessment of Doppler signal intensity increase. However, the recent availability of real time contrast-enhanced US imaging and quantification data is very promising. The majority of published papers involves rheumatoid arthritis and demonstrates the value of this technique to improve diagnosis, stage the activity of the disease and follow the patients under therapy. These preliminary studies are extending to other disorders (inflammatory arthritides as well as degenerative disorders). Structures other than articular synovium are undergoing investigations (bone, enthesis). New applications are being developed such as contrast-enhanced US of muscular diseases. This new imaging technique appears to have great potentials for the assessment of musculoskeletal diseases.