Rheumatoid Arthritis Pharmacotherapy
DMARD-centric Management — csDMARDs, bDMARDs, JAK Inhibitors, Adjuncts & Treat-to-Target
Past RGUHS + DNB + MPMSU + VNSGU · 9
RGUHSMay '25
MPMSUOct '25
VNSGUJun '23
MPMSUAug '21
MPMSUJul '20
DNBDec '16
DNBDec '15
DNBDec '12
RGUHSOct '10
Rheumatoid Arthritis Pharmacotherapy
1. Definition & disease overview
- Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic, progressive, systemic autoimmune disease characterised by joint inflammation, synovial proliferation (pannus) and destruction of articular cartilage; multiple small joints of hands and feet are preferentially and symmetrically affected, with deformities developing as disease progresses (KDT 8e Ch.15, pp.227–8).
- RA affects about 1% of the population, shortens life, and reduces mobility and quality of life — it is a systemic immunologic disease, not merely a local arthropathy (Katzung 16e Ch.36, p.681; G&G 14e Ch.42, p.847).
- The course is waxing and waning ("flares" and remissions); it is a crippling disorder if untreated (KDT 8e Ch.15, p.227).
- Diagnosis is supported by rheumatoid factor (RF) and anti-cyclic-citrullinated-peptide (anti-CCP) antibody positivity, raised ESR and C-reactive protein (CRP), and characteristic radiographic erosions; seronegativity predicts a relatively better methotrexate response (KDT 8e Ch.15, p.236 [problem-directed study]; Katzung 16e Ch.36, p.689).
Continue reading
Rheumatoid Arthritis Pharmacotherapy
PharmaNotes Pro · Comprehensive
Sign in with your Google account. If you're already subscribed, the chapter unlocks immediately — otherwise, pick Monthly or Annual on the next step.