• Title of article

    How to induce remission in primary systemic vasculitis

  • Author/Authors

    David Jayne، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
  • Pages
    13
  • From page
    293
  • To page
    305
  • Abstract
    Systemic vasculitis is treatable but not curable. Combination therapy with corticosteroids and immune suppressives induces remission in approximately 90% of cases, and therapeutic regimens have been standardised by randomised controlled trials. Patient subgrouping at presentation reflects prognosis and influences the design of induction regimens. Ongoing problems are therapeutic toxicity, especially in the elderly, the quality of remission obtained and the need for long-term therapy to prevent relapse. Cyclophosphamide remains the most effective immune suppressive, and more recent protocols have minimised its toxicity. An increasing range of newer immune suppressives, and therapeutic recombinant proteins aimed at cytokine blockade or lymphocyte depletion, is emerging. Their correct evaluation and integration with current regimens to improve long-term outcome is the major challenge in clinical vasculitis research today.
  • Keywords
    mycophenolate mofetil , glomerulonephritis , cyclophosphamide , methotrexate , therapy. , Relapse , Remission , Wegener’s granulomatosis , azathioprine , polyarteritis nodosa , microscopic polyangiitis , systemic vasculitis , Churg–Strauss angiitis
  • Journal title
    Best Practice and Research Clinical Rheumatology
  • Serial Year
    2005
  • Journal title
    Best Practice and Research Clinical Rheumatology
  • Record number

    467118