Summary
Scientists have identified a new type of cell that appears in the bloodstream of rheumatoid arthritis patients shortly before joint inflammation flares.
A never-before-seen cell type could forewarn of rheumatoid arthritis symptoms.
The cells, dubbed “PRIME cells,” accumulate in the blood during the week prior to disease flare-ups, Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator Robert Darnell's team reports July 15, 2020, in the New England Journal of Medicine. The findings could lead to better prediction of when severe pain and swelling, called “flares” will occur, as well as provide new avenues for treatment.
“PRIME cells are one thing you might want to target to arrest the flare before it happens,” Darnell says. “That’s the ideal of medical science – to know enough about a disease that you can put your finger on what’s about to make someone sick.”
Rheumatoid arthritis is a disease of the immune system that causes inflammation in the joints, especially around the hands and feet. It can be debilitating and frequently strikes people in their 30s or 40s. The symptoms come in waves, with stretches of relative quiet interspersed with painful flares. Current therapeutics, chiefly steroids, can treat these symptoms, but there’s no cure.
The cells, dubbed “PRIME cells,” accumulate in the blood during the week prior to disease flare-ups, Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator Robert Darnell's team reports July 15, 2020, in the New England Journal of Medicine. The findings could lead to better prediction of when severe pain and swelling, called “flares” will occur, as well as provide new avenues for treatment.
“PRIME cells are one thing you might want to target to arrest the flare before it happens,” Darnell says. “That’s the ideal of medical science – to know enough about a disease that you can put your finger on what’s about to make someone sick.”
Rheumatoid arthritis is a disease of the immune system that causes inflammation in the joints, especially around the hands and feet. It can be debilitating and frequently strikes people in their 30s or 40s. The symptoms come in waves, with stretches of relative quiet interspersed with painful flares. Current therapeutics, chiefly steroids, can treat these symptoms, but there’s no cure.
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