Objective. The pathogenetic role of B cells in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is under debate, but it is currently believed to be marginal. The availability of selective anti-B cell treatment provides a unique opportunity to clarify this issue. This study was undertaken to investigate the effects of B cell blockade in the treatment of refractory RA, and to evaluate the implications with regard to the role of B cells in the disease.Methods. Five female patients with active, evolving erosive RA were treated with rituximab, an anti-CD20 chimeric monoclonal antibody. All 5 patients had been nonresponders to combination therapy with methotrexate plus cyclosporin A. Two of the 5 had also failed to respond to anti-tumor necrosis factor ␣ therapy. All of these treatments were discontinued 1 month before institution of anti-CD20 therapy.Results. Marked clinical improvement was observed in 2 patients (American College of Rheumatology 70% response [ACR70] and ACR50, respectively), starting at the end of the second month after institution of anti-CD20 therapy (month 2) and lasting until month 10 in 1 patient (articular relapse) and month 12 in the other (last followup). ACR20 response was observed in 2 additional patients, lasting until month 5 and month 7, respectively (articular relapse in both). Decrease or normalization of serum C-reactive protein and rheumatoid factor levels were observed in these patients. In
Chest US is capable of identifying subpleural consolidation with the same sensitivity as chest radiography and is highly accurate in demonstrating pleural effusion. For this reason, chest US may be a valuable aid and possible alternative to standard chest radiography in the evaluation and follow-up of children with suspected pneumonia.
Microbe-specific diagnosis of community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) in childhood is difficult in clinical practice. Chest radiographs and non-specific inflammatory markers have been used to separate presumably bacterial from viral infection but the results have been inconsistent. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the usefulness of procalcitonin (PCT) in assessing the severity as well as the bacterial or viral aetiology of CAP. Serum PCT was measured by an immunoluminometric assay in 100 patients with CAP; 26 were treated as inpatients and 74 as outpatients. The pulmonary infiltrate was considered to be alveolar in 62 and interstitial in 38 cases, according to the radiological diagnosis. The bacterial and viral aetiology of pneumonia was studied by an extensive serological test panel. No differences were found in PCT concentrations between the 4 aetiological (pneumococcal, atypical bacterial, viral, unknown) and the 3 age (< 2, 2-4 and > or = 5 y) groups. Serum PCT was >0.5 ng/ml in 69%, >1.0 ng/ml in 54% and >2.0 ng/ml in 47% of all patients. PCT was higher in patients that were admitted than as outpatients (medians 17.81 vs 0.72 ng/ml, respectively, p<0.01) and higher in alveolar than in interstitial pneumonia (medians 9.43 vs 0.53 ng/ml, respectively, p<0.01). In conclusion, serum PCT values were found to be related to the severity of CAP in children even though they were not capable, at any level of serum concentration, to differentiate between bacterial and viral aetiology.
The most accurate indicator of hepatic arterial stenosis or thrombosis was a change in the spectral waveform to a tardus-parvus pattern, with 91% sensitivity and 99.1% specificity. Among the other parameters, an increase of the SAT value (> 0.08 second), when associated with the morphologic modification of the systolic peak, is a more reliable parameter than the RI for early detection of artery stenosis, especially when the type of anastomosis is unknown.
The potential role of sonography in evaluating the response to therapy of persistent knee joint synovitis (KJS) was assessed in a longitudinal study in pre-and post-arthroscopic (AS) synovectomy in rheumatoid and psoriatic patients. At entry to the study ultrasound (US) detection of synovial proliferation was compared with arthroscopic visualization as the 'gold standard' reference. US joint effusion and synovial thickness measures and predominant patterns of synovial proliferation were recorded by comparing clinical and US indices before and at 2, 6 and 12 months after AS synovectomy, or after KJS relapse up to 24 months. A 12 month survival analysis of clinical and US outcomes of arthroscopic synovectomy was also performed. US detection of morphology and degree of synovial proliferation was correlated with AS macroscopic evaluation. After AS synovectomy, the clinical index and both US joint effusion and synovial thickness were significantly reduced, whereas US patterns of synovial proliferation did not show significant changes. US and clinical indices were significantly correlated in all follow-up measurements and US joint effusion was significantly increased in the relapsed compared with the non-relapsed KJS group. The probability at 12 months of reaching maximum improvement in US joint effusion and synovial thickness outcomes was 99 and 58%, respectively; that for clinical remission of KJS was 72%. Ultrasound evaluation has proven reliable and accurate by the arthroscopic gold standard in detecting changes of rheumatoid arthritis and psoriatic arthritis knee joint synovitis. The correlation of US with clinical findings in pre-and post synovectomy patients suggests that sonography can be used as an objective method in monitoring the response to therapy of inflammatory knee joint disease.
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