Giacomelli R, Pizzuto F, Cucinelli F, Tonietti G
Dipartimento di Medicina Interna e Sanità Pubblica, Università, L'Aquila.
Recenti Prog Med. 1996 Mar;87(3):124-34.
Vasculitides are a set of serious diseases of unknown aetiology with various immunopathogenetic mechanisms, characterized by inflammation and necrosis of the vessel wall with consequent lumen obliteration. They may be primitive or associated with other diseases, have heterogeneous clinical manifestations and different degrees of severity which may be related to the localization of the interested vessels. Although in the last years many classifications have been proposed, a standardized nomenclature of vasculitides is unquestionably still needed to facilitate the diagnosis and management of patients with the disease. Steroids and immunosuppressant are the conventional therapy, whereas other therapeutic strategies are reserved for the refractory vasculitides to conventional therapies or for intolerant recipients to cytotoxic drugs. New approaches are represented by monoclonal antibodies and drugs which could be effective in the treatment of the trigger factors which activate the immunopathological mechanisms. Current data suggest that, rather than pursuing the idea of a single therapy for vasculitides, an oncological model of combined therapy, to induce both the disease control and maintenance of remission, might be adopted. An improvement of our knowledges on the mechanisms underlying the different entities associated to standardized criteria of activity and remission of disease will lead to an improvement of our therapeutic strategies.