PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Significant funding to ensure personalized treatments that work for rheumatoid arthritis

Study to determine which treatments will work best for which inflammatory arthritis patients should result in patients being better managed without the guessing game

2025-01-06
(Press-News.org)

In recent years treatment with powerful biologic and targeted synthetic therapies has changed the landscape for arthritis, but currently finding the right treatment for each person is a matter of trial and error. Only a proportion of patients with inflammatory arthritis respond to each expensive therapy, which results in unnecessary treatment and a long and often frustrating journey for patients, not to mention significant cost to the NHS.

University of Birmingham researchers have just been awarded £3.5 million funding from Johnson & Johnson to investigate mechanisms of response and non-response to biologic and targeted synthetic therapies in rheumatoid arthritis. In this new study, researchers will take biopsies from patients both before and during treatment during their routine care, to understand why some patients respond better than others, and importantly what goes wrong when a patient doesn’t respond to treatment. This is the first study of its kind systematically analysing tissue samples taken over time and will recruit 100 patients over the next three years.

“Different patients respond to different drugs; so whilst it is good news for patients that there are many to try, it can be a long road until they find something that works. During this time their condition continues to progress and cause pain and discomfort.

 

“We hope that by the end of this study, we will understand much more about how different treatments work for different patients and will be able to recommend effective ways of matching the right treatments to the right patients sooner.”

 

Professor Andrew Filer, Translational rheumatology, University of Birmingham.

 

 

The findings should help clinical decision making for rheumatoid arthritis patients not responding to first line therapies for rheumatoid arthritis. It is important to understand what is happening in each patient’s joints at the tissue level, so that if they are not responding, clinicians can decide whether to switch or add an additional drug to help suppress the disease.

 

Rheumatoid arthritis is a chronic condition that causes joint inflammation, leading to pain and swelling most commonly affecting the hands wrists and feet. The condition affects over 600,000 patients in England, costing an estimated £4.8 billion per year to the UK economy due to health costs and work-related disability.

 

The study will use tissue rather than blood samples to help researchers to better understand what is happening at a cellular level in the joint in the joint itself when different patients are given different treatments. Researchers will make use of single cell and spatial technologies available through Birmingham Tissue Analytics to study the tissue biopsies taken.

 

Birmingham Tissue Analytics is a facility based in the Institute of Translational Medicine and provides a high level digital spatial tissue imaging service for academic-led research and industry collaborators.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

CryoSCAPE: Allen Institute scientists develop ‘suspended animation’ technique for blood draws that will aid research for underserved populations

CryoSCAPE: Allen Institute scientists develop ‘suspended animation’ technique for blood draws that will aid research for underserved populations
2025-01-06
By Rachel Tompa, Ph.D Your blood is a delicate mixture. Researchers and clinicians often use blood to learn what’s going on inside our bodies, in part because siphoning off a tube of blood is easier and less painful than taking biopsies of an internal organ.  But in some cases, it turns out that blood can be very different outside our bodies. When it comes to certain emerging research techniques, the clock starts ticking as soon as your blood hits the tube. As little as six to eight hours later, some aspects of your blood’s ...

Prime apple growing areas in US face increasing climate risks

Prime apple growing areas in US face increasing climate risks
2025-01-06
VANCOUVER, Wash. – Some of the most productive apple regions in America are facing big challenges from a changing climate, according to a Washington State University study. Researchers analyzed over 40 years of climate conditions that impact the growth cycle of apple trees from bud break and flowering through fruit development, maturation and color development. While many growing areas are facing increased climate risks, the top three largest apple producing counties in the U.S. were among the most impacted: Yakima in Washington, Kent in Michigan and Wayne ...

Extended Paxlovid may help some people with long COVID

2025-01-06
An up-close look at how patients respond to the drug at different times and doses adds nuance to a recent finding that Paxlovid does not work for long Covid.   An extended course of Paxlovid appears to help some patients with long Covid, according to a case series by UC San Francisco researchers that suggests this treatment option holds promise for some of those struggling with debilitating symptoms.  These results are at odds with recent research that has failed to show the antiviral can alleviate persistent symptoms of the disease. The authors said more study is needed to find out which patients may benefit from the drug and how long it should be given. The ...

Media coverage of civilian casualties in allied countries boosts support for U.S. involvement

2025-01-06
From photographs of decimated buildings to military and civilian casualty counts to narratives of suffering, news media bring information about foreign conflicts to American audiences. But does this coverage actually affect public opinion about whether and how the United States should be involved in a conflict? Does it influence what Americans think about the U.S. providing military, diplomatic, and economic aid to foreign nations? A new paper from researchers at the Annenberg Public Policy Center (APPC) of the University of Pennsylvania examines these questions and finds that media coverage of civilian casualties increases public support for U.S. involvement in conflicts by evoking empathy ...

Marked decrease in Arctic pressure ridges

Marked decrease in Arctic pressure ridges
2025-01-06
In the Arctic, the old, multiyear ice is increasingly melting, dramatically reducing the frequency and size of pressure ridges. These ridges are created when ice floes press against each other and become stacked, and are a characteristic feature of Arctic sea ice, an obstacle for shipping, but also an essential component of the ecosystem. In a recently released study in the journal Nature Climate Change, experts from the Alfred Wegener Institute report on this trend and analyse observational data from three decades of aerial surveys. Satellite data from the last three decades documents the dramatic changes in Arctic sea ice due to climate change: the area covered in ice in summer ...

Age matters: Kidney disorder indicator gains precision

Age matters: Kidney disorder indicator gains precision
2025-01-06
Annual health checkups regularly include urine tests that serve several purposes, including checking for symptoms of kidney disease. The presence of albumin in the urine is one indicator as is glomerular filtration rate. In diabetic nephropathy, albuminuria first appears, leading to excessive filtration and eventually a decrease in GFR. In the elderly, however, excessive filtration cannot be detected due to age-related GFR decline. To accurately assess GFR, Osaka Metropolitan University researchers have come up with ...

New guidelines for managing blood cancers in pregnancy

2025-01-04
A new set of guidelines has been developed to assist with the diagnosis and expert management of serious blood cancers in pregnancy. About 12.5 pregnancies per 100,000 are affected by blood cancers such as acute leukaemia and aggressive lymphomas, and their incidence has been rising. Between 1994 and 2013, they increased by 2.7 per cent a year, due to factors including women having children later, improved diagnostic techniques, and increased health system engagement. An Australian working group has now published a new position statement in the latest edition of The Lancet Haematology, based on current evidence and expert consensus. It ...

New study suggests RNA present on surfaces of leaves may shape microbial communities

2025-01-03
Biologists at Indiana University Bloomington have shown that the surfaces of plant leaves are coated with a diverse array of RNA molecules. The finding suggests that the RNA present on the leaf surface may play a role in shaping the microbial communities that inhabit them, potentially influencing plant health and interactions within their environment, according to a new study. The study, Diverse plant RNAs coat Arabidopsis leaves and are distinct from apoplastic RNAs, was published Jan. 3, 2025 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The first authors are Lucía ...

U.S. suffers from low social mobility. Is sprawl partly to blame?

2025-01-03
Urban sprawl is not just unsightly. It could also be impeding intergenerational mobility for low-income residents and reinforcing racial inequality, according to a series of recent studies led by a University of Utah geographer. One analysis of tract-level Census data co-authored with a former economics graduate student in the U’s College of Social & Behavioral Science found that people who grew up in high-sprawl neighborhoods have less earning potential than those who grew in denser neighborhoods. “For adults, jobs are harder to access in more sprawling neighborhoods,” said Kelsey Carlston, now an assistant professor of economics at Gonzaga University. “If we ...

Research spotlight: Improving predictions about brain cancer outcomes with the right imaging criteria

2025-01-03
Raymond Y. Huang, MD, Ph.D., of the Department of Radiology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, is the corresponding author of a paper published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, “Comparative Analysis of Intracranial Response Assessment Criteria in Patients With Melanoma Brain Metastases Treated With Combination Nivolumab + Ipilimumab in CheckMate 204.” How would you summarize your study for a lay audience? Our study examines how different imaging criteria can be used to assess brain tumor responses ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Earth’s air war: Explaining the delayed rise of plants, animals on land

More than half of college students report alcohol-related harms from others

Smart food drying techniques with AI enhance product quality and efficiency

Typical cost of developing new pharmaceuticals is skewed by high-cost outliers

Predicting the progression of autoimmune disease with AI

Unlocking Romance: UCLA offers dating program for autistic adults

Research Spotlight: Researchers reveal the influences behind timing of sleep spindle production

New research reveals groundwater pathways across continent

Students and faculty to join research teams this spring at Department of Energy National Laboratories and a fusion facility

SETI Forward recognizes tomorrow’s cosmic pioneers

Top mental health research achievements of 2024 from the Brain & Behavior Research Foundation

FAU names Lewis S. Nelson, M.D., Dean of the Schmidt College of Medicine

UC Irvine-led study challenges traditional risk factors for brain health in the oldest-old

Study shows head trauma may activate latent viruses, leading to neurodegeneration

Advancements in neural implant research enhance durability

SwRI models Pluto-Charon formation scenario that mimics Earth-Moon system

Researchers identify public policies that work to prevent suicide

Korea University College of Medicine and Yale Univeristy co-host forum on Advancing Healthcare through Data and AI Innovations

Nuclear lipid droplets: Key regulators of aging and nuclear homeostasis

Driving autonomous vehicles to a more efficient future

Severe maternal morbidity among pregnant people with opioid use disorder enrolled in Medicaid

Macronutrients in human milk exposed to antidepressant and anti-inflammatory medications

Exploring the eco-friendly future of antibiotic particles

Can you steam away prostate cancer?

The CTAO becomes a European Research Infrastructure Consortium

Introduction to science journalism guide published in Albanian

Official launch of Global Heat Health Information Network Southeast Asia Hub at NUS Medicine

Childhood smoking increases a person’s risk of developing COPD

MD Anderson and Myriad Genetics form strategic alliance to evaluate clinical utility of Myriad’s molecular residual disease assay

Method can detect harmful salts forming in nuclear waste melters

[Press-News.org] Significant funding to ensure personalized treatments that work for rheumatoid arthritis
Study to determine which treatments will work best for which inflammatory arthritis patients should result in patients being better managed without the guessing game