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Abbott Laboratories finds drug combo works best for rheumatoid
arthritis
Abbott Laboratories finds drug combo works best for
rheumatoid arthritis
Date published: 10/01/2006
A
combination drug therapy is successful in treating early stage rheumatoid
arthritis (RA), according to research published in Arthritis & Rheumatism.
Researchers, sponsored by Abbot Laboratories, found that patients given both
disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARD) and anti-tumour necrosis factor
(anti-TNF) drugs achieved remission more successfully than receiving either
treatment alone.
The study looked at 799 patients at sites across
Europe, Australia and North America, who had an average age of 52 and had RA
for only six months or less. Researchers divided the group into three; two
single treatment groups were given either DMARD drug MTX or anti-TNF treatment
adalimumab, whilst one group was given both.
Combining DMAND and
anti-TNF therapies also proved to be safe and was well tolerated by the
patients, who displayed few adverse reactions. George T Spencer-Green,
spokesperson for the study, said that the participants had a particular
aggressive form of the disease and that milder RA sufferers could benefit from
a single DMARD therapy.
"For the patient with early, aggressive and
erosive RA, treatment with combination therapy is superior to treatment with
MTX alone," he added.
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