Title of article
Celecoxib versus diclofenac in long-term management of rheumatoid arthritis: randomised double-blind comparison
Author/Authors
Paul Emery، نويسنده , , Henning Zeidler، نويسنده , , Tore K. Kvien، نويسنده , , Mario Guslandi، نويسنده , , Raphael Naudin، نويسنده , , Helen Stead، نويسنده , , Kenneth M Verburg، نويسنده , , Peter C. Isakson، نويسنده , , Richard W. Hubbard، نويسنده , , G Steven Geis، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Pages
6
From page
2106
To page
2111
Abstract
Background
Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) inhibit cyclo-oxygenase (COX), which leads to suppression of COX-1-mediated production of gastrointestinal-protective prostaglandins. Gastrointestinal injury is a common outcome. We compared the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of long-term therapy with celecoxib, a COX-1 sparing inhibitor of COX-2, with diclofenac, a non-specific COX inhibitor.
Methods
655 patients with adult-onset rheumatoid arthritis of at least 6 monthsʹ duration were randomly assigned oral celecoxib 200 mg twice daily or diclofenac SR 75 mg twice daily for 24 weeks. Anti-inflammatory and analgesic activity and tolerability were assessed at baseline, every 4 weeks, and at week 24. We assessed gastrointestinal safety by upper-gastrointestinal endoscopy within 7 days of the last treatment dose at centres where the procedure was available. Analysis was by intention-to-treat.
Findings
430 patients underwent endoscopy (celecoxib n=212, diclofenac n=218). The two drugs were similar in management of rheumatoid arthritis pain and inflammation. Gastroduodenal ulcers were detected endoscopically in 33 (15%) patients treated with diclofenac and in eight (4%) in the celecoxib group (p<0•001). The rate of withdrawal for any gastrointestinal-related adverse event, most commonly abdominal pain, diarrhoea, and dyspepsia, was nearly three times higher in the diclofenac-treated group than in the celecoxib group (16 vs 6%; p<0•001).
Interpretation
Celecoxib showed sustained anti-inflammatory and analgesic activity similar to diclofenac, with a lower frequency of upper gastrointestinal ulceration or gastrointestinal adverse events, and tolerability was better.
Journal title
The Lancet
Serial Year
1999
Journal title
The Lancet
Record number
550506
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