Levels of certain microRNAs were associated with response to treatment with an anti–tumor necrosis factor–alpha agent and conventional disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs in patients with rheumatoid arthritis, according to a study conducted by Dr. Carmen Castro-Villegas and her associates.

In patients who responded to the combination therapy, 91% had overexpressed miRNA, while 9% had downregulated miRNA. Of the 10 miRNA selected for analysis, 6 had been significantly upregulated by the therapy (miR-16-5p, miR-23-3p, miR125b-5p, miR-126-3p, miR-146a-5p, miR-223-3p), and only patients who responded to the therapy showed an increase in these miRNA. The miRNA increase also paralleled a reduction in TNF-alpha, interleukins, rheumatoid factor, and C-reactive protein.

Further analyses showed that miR-23-3p and miR-223-3p can act to predict patients who would not benefit from combination therapy with anti-TNF-alpha agents and conventional disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs or indicate treatment efficacy or the degree of response, the investigators said. Find the full study in Arthritis Research & Therapy (doi:10.1186/s13075-015-0555-z).

Ads

You May Also Like

Asthma raises adults’ risk of sleep apnea

Adults who have asthma are at significantly greater risk than are those who don’t ...

More than 90% of Americans have health insurance, HHS reports

About 12.7 million people have either selected plans or were automatically reenrolled through the ...

Oral bacterium linked to poor esophageal cancer survival

FROM CLINICAL CANCER RESEARCH Fusobacterium nucleatum, a component of the human microbiome, appears to ...