News

RA risk lowered by recent gastrointestinal and urogenital infections


 

References

People with gastrointestinal or urogenital infections in the 2 years prior to answering a questionnaire had significantly lower odds of having rheumatoid arthritis in a Swedish population-based case-control study, Dr. Maria E. C. Sandberg and her associates reported.

Gastroenteritis, urinary tract infections, and genital infections were significantly associated with a lower likelihood of having rheumatoid arthritis. Prostatitis, a much less common disease, had a protective effect at a similar magnitude, but a smaller sample size meant the association was not statistically significant. No association was found for sinusitis, tonsillitis, and pneumonia.

The sites of infections that conferred a decreased risk in the study were primarily infected with gram-negative bacteria, while the sites in which infections did not confer a decreased risk were primarily infected with gram-positive bacteria, the researchers noted.

The investigators noted that the findings “could be particularly interesting in light of emerging data implicating that the microbiome in the gut may play a role in RA pathogenesis since mucosal sites are exposed to a high load of bacterial antigens and may thus represent the site of initiation or modification of inflammation in RA.”

Read the full article published online Feb. 4 in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases (doi:10.1136/annrheumdis-2014-206493).

Recommended Reading

Nonsteroidal ‘DAGR’ looks sharp against RA
MDedge Internal Medicine
Tapering TNFi’s safe and much cheaper in RA
MDedge Internal Medicine
FDA issues new pregnancy/lactation drug label standards
MDedge Internal Medicine
Number, not level, of positive antibodies predicts mortality in early RA
MDedge Internal Medicine
Rx for specialists: Know how ACA affects patients’ ability to pay for meds
MDedge Internal Medicine
Antibody elimination may mark radiographic outcomes in RA
MDedge Internal Medicine
Reducing abatacept feasible for poor-prognosis early RA patients
MDedge Internal Medicine
MRI shows ongoing inflammation despite clinical remission in early RA
MDedge Internal Medicine
RA clinical remission possible with half etanercept dose
MDedge Internal Medicine
Consider Chikungunya virus in new-onset polyarthritis
MDedge Internal Medicine