医学
强直性脊柱炎
疾病
轴性脊柱炎
叙述性评论
临床表型
物理疗法
老年学
重症监护医学
免疫学
表型
内科学
骶髂关节炎
生物化学
化学
基因
作者
Steven R. Kohn,Abeera Azam,Lauren Hamilton,Stephanie Harrison,Elizabeth R. Graef,Kristen J. Young,Helena Marzo‐Ortega,Jean W. Liew
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.berh.2023.101875
摘要
Axial spondyloarthritis (axSpA) was historically considered a disease of men, largely due to the recognition of a more severe, progressive phenotype, ankylosing spondylitis (AS; or radiographic axSpA, r-axSpA) aiding the clinical diagnosis [[1], [2]]. Data demonstrating the near equal prevalence of axSpA in women only started to emerge in the last decades, highlighting intrinsic differences in disease phenotype, and clinical and imaging characteristics between sexes, which partly explain the issue of underdiagnosis in women. Similar to the evolving understanding of spondyloarthritis and the diseases that term describes, the concepts of gender and sex also warrant further clarification to accurately assess their potential role in disease pathophysiology and phenotypic expression. This narrative review delves into the most recent evidence from the literature on the true prevalence of sex differences in axSpA, and the impact of sex and gender on diagnosis, disease characteristics and treatment response in this, still underserved, chronic disease.
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