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

Infections in rheumatoid arthritis patients: Mayo Clinic study finds way to pinpoint risk

2012-09-05
(Press-News.org) ROCHESTER, Minn. -- Rheumatoid arthritis alone is painful and disabling, but it also puts patients at higher risk of death. The greater susceptibility to infections that accompanies the autoimmune disorder is one reason. Assessing the danger of infection a particular patient faces so it can be addressed can prove challenging for physicians. A Mayo Clinic study finds that a risk score can be developed to predict a patient's chances of having serious infections. The score uses information about how rheumatoid arthritis is affecting a patient, plus factors including age, corticosteroid use and the presence of other illnesses.

The findings are published online in the American College of Rheumatology journal Arthritis & Rheumatism.

Using the National Institutes of Health-funded Rochester Epidemiology Project, researchers studied medical records of 584 rheumatoid arthritis patients diagnosed between 1955 and 1994 and followed up on until January 2000. Of those, 252, or nearly half, had more than one serious infection requiring hospitalization and/or intravenous antibiotic; those 252 collectively racked up 646 infections.

The Mayo team developed an infection risk score based on those and other rheumatoid arthritis patients they studied. Factors in the calculation include age; previous serious infections; corticosteroid use; a low white blood cell count; elevated results in a blood test used to detect signs of inflammation, called an erythrocyte sedimentation rate; signs of rheumatoid arthritis outside joints; and the presence of other serious conditions such as heart disease, heart failure, diabetes, lung disease, vascular disease and alcoholism. They confirmed the usefulness of the risk score in a second group of patients with rheumatoid arthritis from the same population.

"Using a risk score in this way can alert physicians that their patient is at high risk for infection and needs more frequent follow-ups, measures for infection prevention and possible changes in treatments," says senior author Eric Matteson, M.D., chair of the Division of Rheumatology at Mayo Clinic.

"Rheumatoid arthritis patients are at higher risk of infection, and that risk is clearly not just because of the arthritis drugs."

More research is needed to determine the level of infection risk at which patients get the most benefit from medications to prevent infection and how infection risk might affect use of a category of rheumatoid arthritis drugs called disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs, or DMARDs, such as biologics, the study says.

### The research was funded by Genentech, the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases and the Rochester Epidemiology Project, which is funded by a National Institute on Aging grant. Study sponsor Genentech approved the study design and reviewed and approved the manuscript before it was submitted; the Mayo Clinic study authors independently designed the study, collected the data, interpreted the results, wrote the manuscript and had the final decision to submit the manuscript for publication. Dr. Matteson has received research grants from Centocor, Genentech, Human Genome Sciences, Pfizer, Novartis and UCB.

The co-authors are Cynthia Crowson, Deana Hoganson, M.D., and Patrick Fitz-Gibbon of Mayo Clinic.

About Mayo Clinic Mayo Clinic is a nonprofit worldwide leader in medical care, research and education for people from all walks of life. For more information, visit http://www.mayoclinic.org/about and www.mayoclinic.org/news.

Contact:

Sharon Theimer
507-284-5005 (days)
507-284-2511 (evenings)



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Epigenetic causes of prostate cancer

2012-09-05
This press release is available in German. In about half of all prostate tumours, there are two genetic areas that are fused with one another. When this is not the case, the exact way cancer cells originate in prostate tumours was not clear until now. Scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics in Berlin, in cooperation with a team of international researchers, were able to show that the genesis of this fusion-negative prostate cancer has epigenetic causes: methyl groups are distributed differently over the DNA in the cancer cells than in healthy cells. ...

Harnessing anticancer drugs for the future fight against influenza

Harnessing anticancer drugs for the future fight against influenza
2012-09-05
Medical Systems Virology group at the Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland (FIMM) at the University of Helsinki, together with its national and international collaborators, developed a new cell screening method that can be used to identify potential anti-influenza drugs. The researchers were able to identify two novel compounds with anti-influenza activity, obatoclax and gemcitabine and prove the efficacy of a previously known drug saliphenylhalamide. The study was recently accepted for publication in the Journal of Biological Chemistry and is now available online. Influenza ...

DNA sequences need quality time too - guidelines for quality control published

DNA sequences need quality time too - guidelines for quality control published
2012-09-05
Like all sources of information, DNA sequences come in various degrees of quality and reliability. To identify, proof, and discard compromised molecular data has thus become a critical component of the scientific endeavor - one that everyone generating sequence data is assumed to carry out before using the sequences for research purposes. "Many researchers find sequence quality control difficult, though", says Dr. Henrik Nilsson of the University of Gothenburg and the lead author of a new article on sequence reliability, published in the Open Access journal MycoKeys. ...

Archaeology team announces 'huge step forward' in King Richard III search

Archaeology team announces huge step forward in King Richard III search
2012-09-05
Archaeologists from the University of Leicester who are leading the search for King Richard III have announced they have overcome the first significant hurdle of their investigation – and made a huge step forward in the search for the King by locating the church where he was buried. The University of Leicester is leading the archaeological search for the burial place of King Richard III with Leicester City Council, in association with the Richard III Society. In 1485 King Richard III was defeated at the battle of Bosworth. His body, stripped and despoiled, was brought ...

Study uncovers simple way of predicting severe pain following breast cancer surgery

2012-09-05
WOMEN having surgery for breast cancer are up to three times more likely to have severe pain in the first week after surgery if they suffer from other painful conditions, such as arthritis, low back pain and migraine, according to a Cancer Research UK study published today (Wednesday) in the British Journal of Cancer. Of the women surveyed, 41 per cent reported moderate to severe pain at rest, and 50 per cent on movement, one week after their surgery. Most patients having breast cancer surgery are discharged home by this time. Psychological state was also important, ...

When do we lie? When we're short on time and long on reasons

2012-09-05
Almost all of us have been tempted to lie at some point, whether about our GPA, our annual income, or our age. But what makes us actually do it? In a study forthcoming in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, psychological scientists Shaul Shalvi of the University of Amsterdam and Ori Eldar and Yoella Bereby-Meyer of Ben Gurion University investigated what factors influence dishonest behavior. Previous research shows that a person's first instinct is to serve his or her own self-interest. And research also shows that people are ...

Children exposed to 2 phthalates have elevated risk of asthma-related airway inflammation

2012-09-05
Children exposed to diethyl phthalate (DEP) and butylbenzyl phthalate (BBzP)—phthalate chemicals commonly found in personal care and plastic products—have elevated risk of asthma-related airway inflammation, according to researchers at Columbia Center for Children's Environmental Health (CCCEH) at the Mailman School of Public Health. Of the 244 children aged 5 to 9 in the study, all had detectable levels of phthalates in their urine although these varied over a wide range. Higher levels of both phthalates were associated with higher levels of nitric oxide in exhaled ...

Telaprevir: Added benefit in certain patients with hepatitis C

2012-09-05
The drug telaprevir (trade name: Incivo®) has been available for treatment of chronic hepatitis C infection of genotype 1 since autumn 2011. In an early benefit assessment pursuant to the "Act on the Reform of the Market for Medicinal Products" (AMNOG), the German Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care (IQWiG) examined whether telaprevir offers an added benefit compared with the present standard therapy. According to the findings of the assessment, the new drug telaprevir offers advantages in various groups of patients with chronic hepatitis C infection ...

New study examines how ocean energy impacts life in the deep sea

New study examines how ocean energy impacts life in the deep sea
2012-09-05
Durham, NC — A new study of deep-sea species across the globe aims to understand how natural gradients in food and temperature in the dark, frigid waters of the deep sea affect the snails, clams, and other creatures that live there. Similar studies have been conducted for animals in the shallow oceans, but our understanding of the impact of food and temperature on life in the deep sea — the Earth's largest and most remote ecosystem — has been more limited. The results will help scientists understand what to expect in the deep sea under future climate change, the researchers ...

Gender equality influences how people choose their partners

2012-09-05
Men and women clearly have different strategies for picking sexual partners, but the reason why differences exist is less clear. The classic explanation for these differences has been that men's and women's brains have evolved to make certain choices, but a new study in Psychological Science, a publication of the Association for Psychological Science, suggests that evolution is only part of the answer. To be a 'success' in evolutionary terms, women need to have access to resources for raising offspring, and men need to have access to fertile females. Researchers have ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Male flies sharpened their eyesight to call the females' bluff

School bans alone not enough to tackle negative impacts of phone and social media use

Explaining science in court with comics

‘Living’ electrodes breathe new life into traditional silicon electronics

One in four chance per year that rocket junk will enter busy airspace

Later-onset menopause linked to healthier blood vessels, lower heart disease risk

New study reveals how RNA travels between cells to control genes across generations

Women health sector leaders good for a nation’s wealth, health, innovation, ethics

‘Good’ cholesterol may be linked to heightened glaucoma risk among over 55s

GLP-1 drug shows little benefit for people with Parkinson’s disease

Generally, things really do seem better in morning, large study suggests

Juicing may harm your health in just three days, new study finds

Forest landowner motivation to control invasive species depends on land use, study shows

Coal emissions cost India millions in crop damages

$10.8 million award funds USC-led clinical trial to improve hip fracture outcomes

University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center among most reputable academic medical centers

Emilia Morosan on team awarded Kavli Foundation grant for quantum geometry-enabled superconductivity

Unlock sales growth: Implement “buy now, pay later” to increase customer spending

Research team could redefine biomedical research

Bridging a gap in carbon removal strategies

Outside-in signaling shows a route into cancer cells

NFL wives bring signature safe swim event to New Orleans

Pickleball program boosts health and wellness for cancer survivors, Moffitt study finds

International Alzheimer’s prevention trial in young adults begins

Why your headphone battery doesn't last

Study probes how to predict complications from preeclampsia

CNIC scientists design an effective treatment strategy to prevent heart injury caused by a class of anticancer drugs

NYU’s Yann LeCun a winner of the 2025 Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering

New study assesses impact of agricultural research investments on biodiversity, land use

High-precision NEID spectrograph helps confirm first Gaia astrometric planet discovery

[Press-News.org] Infections in rheumatoid arthritis patients: Mayo Clinic study finds way to pinpoint risk