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Rheumatoid Arthritis Pathogenesis, Prediction, and Prevention: An Emerging Paradigm Shift

Journal

ARTHRITIS & RHEUMATOLOGY
Volume 73, Issue 2, Pages 181-193

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/art.41417

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The prevention of RA is a critical topic, involving predicting individuals who may develop clinically apparent RA in the future and discussions on clinical trials for prevention. Studies aimed at delaying or preventing clinically apparent IA/RA onset have gained attention, as making prevention of RA a future public health strategy has become a focus.
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is currently diagnosed and treated when an individual presents with signs and symptoms of inflammatory arthritis (IA) as well as other features, such as autoantibodies and/or imaging findings, that provide sufficient confidence that the individual has RA-like IA (e.g., meeting established classification criteria) that warrants therapeutic intervention. However, it is now known that there is a stage of seropositive RA during which circulating biomarkers and other factors (e.g., joint symptoms) can be used to predict if and when an individual who does not currently have IA may develop future clinically apparent IA and classifiable RA. Indeed, the discovery of the pre-RA stage of seropositive disease has led to the development of several clinical trials in which individuals are studied to identify ways to delay or prevent the onset of clinically apparent IA/RA. This review focuses on several issues pertinent to understanding the prevention of RA. These include discussion of the pathogenesis of pre-RA development, prediction of the likelihood and timing of future classifiable RA, and a review of completed and ongoing clinical trials in RA prevention. Furthermore, this review discusses challenges and opportunities to be addressed to effect a paradigm shift in RA, where in the near future, proactive risk assessment focused on prevention of RA will become a public health strategy in much the same manner as cardiovascular disease is managed today.

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