Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3368277 Journal of Autoimmunity 2008 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectiveIncreased cardiovascular (CV) risk is a rheumatoid arthritis (RA) hallmark and it has been mainly related to chronic systemic inflammation. Since inflammation is linked to coagulation perturbation, both may play a role in increasing CV risk. Treatment with tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α blocking agents is effective in RA and reduces local and systemic inflammation but there is little information on its effect on coagulation. We therefore investigated inflammation and coagulation plasma biomarkers before and after infliximab treatment in RA patients.MethodsWe studied 20 patients with active RA and 40 healthy controls. Patients were treated with: a stable dose of methotrexate (10 mg/week), and infliximab (3 mg/kg) at weeks 0, 2, 6 and 14. At baseline and week 14, we determined: disease activity score (DAS-28), visual analogue scale pain, erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), and plasma levels of C-reactive protein (CRP), TNF-α, interleukin (IL)-6, prothrombin fragment 1 + 2 (F1 + 2) and D-dimer. The same inflammation and coagulation parameters were evaluated 1 h after infliximab infusion in 10 patients.ResultsAt baseline, ESR, CRP, TNF-α, IL-6, F1 + 2 and D-dimer levels were significantly higher in RA patients than in controls (P = 0.0001). After 14 weeks of infliximab treatment, there was a significant clinical improvement and ESR and CRP, IL-6, F1 + 2 and D-dimer level decrease (P = 0.001–P = 0.008). The levels of TNF-α, IL-6, F1 + 2 and D-dimer significantly decreased 1 h after infliximab infusion (P = 0.005).ConclusionsInfliximab decreases inflammation and coagulation biomarkers in RA patients. Such a combined effect may be pivotal in reducing the whole thrombotic risk in these patients.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Immunology and Microbiology Immunology
Authors
, , , , , , , ,