| Literature DB >> 32039436 |
Huiqiong Zeng1, Baiwei Luo1, Yue Zhang1, Zhongyu Xie2, Zhizhong Ye1.
Abstract
The pathogenesis of reactive arthritis (ReA) has not been fully elucidated. In recent years, many researchers have confirmed that multiple cytokines are involved in the occurrence and development of ReA. Although ReA is self-limiting, it is still incurable for some patients who have no or a weak response to traditional drugs, such as non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agents, glucocorticoids and immunosuppressive agents. This is called refractory reactive arthritis. Currently, there is insufficient evidences for the treatment of refractory ReA with biological agents, though biological agents against cytokines have been developed over the past few years. This review summarizes the current development of clinical treatments of ReA with biological agents, which provides future investigations on refractory ReA with more evidence and references.Entities:
Keywords: Cytokines; Reactive arthritis; biological agents; review; treatment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32039436 PMCID: PMC7033307 DOI: 10.1042/BSR20191927
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosci Rep ISSN: 0144-8463 Impact factor: 3.840
Figure 1Five major functional pathways in pathogenesis of ReA
I, The deceased ratio of Th1/Th17 and increased myeloid cells caused by Chlamydia inflammation lead to the transmission of Chlamydia antigen [27,28]. II, Chlamydia-induced reactive arthritis is TNF-dependent inflammatory disease. Increased TNF-α production and deficient Treg control promoted ReA [14]. III, iNKT cells play a protective role against Salmonella-induced ReA by down-regulating IL17-γδT cells [26]. IV, Lactobacillus casei can inhibit the expression of TNF-α, IL-17, IL-23, IL-1 and IL-6 in intestinal lymph nodes which lead to protective role in ReA. V, TNFRp55 regulates the cytokine production and enhanced the production of IFN-γ and IL-17, which developed severe chronic Yersinia enterocolitica-induced (ReA) [32–34]. Note: Th1/Th17:Helper T cell; iNKT cell: Constant-type natural killer cell; υδT cell: Innate immune cell; TNF-RP55: TNF receptor of p55; (-): inhibition; (+): activation.”
Anti-TNF agents in ReA treatment
| Author, Year (reference) | No. of patients | Anti-TNF agents | Dose (mg/kg) | Clinical infection | Microbial infection | Severe adverse reaction | Efficacy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Meyer, 2011 [ | 10 | I, A, E | Not to mention | 4wk<ReA | 4wk<ReA | none | 90% |
| Oili, 2003 [ | 2 | I | 3 | Diarrhea | Yersinia | none | Yes |
| Gaylis, 2003 [ | 1 | I | 5 | HIV | HIV | none | Yes |
| Gill, 2008 [ | 1 | I | 3 | Urethritis | Chlamydia | none | Yes |
| Gaylis, 2012 [ | 1 | I | 3 | HIV | HIV | none | Yes |
| Schafranski, 2010 [ | 1 | I | 5 | Urethritis | Chlamydia | none | Yes |
| Wechalekar, 2010 [ | 1 | I | 6 | Urethritis | Chlamydia | none | Yes |
| Flagg, 2005 [ | 10 | E | 25 mg/time | 6wk<ReA | 6wk<ReA | none | 90% |
| Edrees, 2012 [ | 1 | E | 50 mg/ time | Urethritis | Chlamydia | none | Yes |
| Sánchez, 2007 [ | 1 | A | 40 mg/ time | pharyngitis | none | none | Yes |
| Ahogo, 2017 [ | 1 | I | 5 | none | none | none | Yes |
I: Infliximab, E: Etanercept, A: Adalimumab
HIV: Human Immunodeficiency Virus
Other biologic agents (non TNF-α blockers) in ReA treatment
| Author, Year (reference) | No. of patients | Anti-TNF agents | Dose (mg/kg) | Clinical infection | Microbial infection | Severe adverse reaction | Efficacy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tanaka, 2009 [ | 1 | Tozilizumab | 8 | Urethritis | none | none | Yes |
| Van, 2018 [ | 1 | Secukinumab | 300 mg/time | Not to mention | Not to mention | none | Yes |