贾纳斯激酶
医学
免疫学
类风湿性关节炎
免疫系统
细胞因子
炎症
发病机制
肿瘤坏死因子α
关节炎
作者
Iain B. McInnes,Georg Schett
出处
期刊:The Lancet
[Elsevier BV]
日期:2017-06-01
卷期号:389 (10086): 2328-2337
被引量:1116
标识
DOI:10.1016/s0140-6736(17)31472-1
摘要
Rheumatoid arthritis is a chronic autoimmune disease that causes progressive articular damage, functional loss, and comorbidity. The development of effective biologics and small-molecule kinase inhibitors in the past two decades has substantially improved clinical outcomes. Just as understanding of pathogenesis has led in large part to the development of drugs, so have mode-of-action studies of these specific immune-targeted agents revealed which immune pathways drive articular inflammation and related comorbidities. Cytokine inhibitors have definitively proven a critical role for tumour necrosis factor α and interleukin 6 in disease pathogenesis and possibly also for granulocyte–macrophage colony-stimulating factor. More recently, clinical trials with Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors have shown that cytokine receptors that signal through the JAK/STAT signalling pathway are important for disease, informing the pathogenetic function of additional cytokines (such as the interferons). Finally, successful use of costimulatory blockade and B-cell depletion in the clinic has revealed that the adaptive immune response and the downstream events initiated by these cells participate directly in synovial inflammation. Taken together, it becomes apparent that understanding the effects of specific immune interventions can elucidate definitive molecular or cellular nodes that are essential to maintain complex inflammatory networks that subserve diseases like rheumatoid arthritis.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI