Bresnihan Barry, Gerlag Danielle M, Rooney Terence, Smeets Tom J M, Wijbrandts Carla A, Boyle David, Fitzgerald Oliver, Kirkham Bruce W, McInnes Iain B, Smith Malcolm, Ulfgren Ann-Kristin, Veale Douglas J, Tak Paul P
Department of Rheumatology, St. Vincent's University Hospital, and The Conway Institute of Biomolecular and Biomedical Research, University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland.
J Rheumatol. 2007 Mar;34(3):620-2.
Successive studies from one academic center (Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands) have consistently suggested that synovial tissue expression of sublining macrophages may be a biomarker of clinical response to therapeutic intervention in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) clinical trials. A proof-of-concept, randomized clinical trial was completed at a second academic center (St. Vincent's University Hospital, Dublin, Ireland), and the relationship between the change in disease activity and the change in sublining macrophages in distinct treatment cohorts was determined. The preliminary findings were not conclusive, but appeared to support a role for sublining CD68+ macrophages as a biomarker of clinical response to therapeutic intervention in cohorts of patients with RA.
来自同一个学术中心(荷兰阿姆斯特丹大学学术医学中心)的一系列研究一致表明,滑膜下层巨噬细胞的组织表达可能是类风湿关节炎(RA)临床试验中治疗干预临床反应的生物标志物。在第二个学术中心(爱尔兰都柏林圣文森特大学医院)完成了一项概念验证随机临床试验,并确定了不同治疗队列中疾病活动度变化与滑膜下层巨噬细胞变化之间的关系。初步研究结果尚无定论,但似乎支持滑膜下层CD68+巨噬细胞作为RA患者队列中治疗干预临床反应生物标志物的作用。