Defining a role for fibroblasts in the persistence of chronic inflammatory joint disease

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Abstract

The most surprising feature of the inflammatory response in rheumatoid arthritis is not that it occurs but that it does not resolve. The persistence of the chronic inflammatory response in conjunction with ongoing joint destruction is an all too familiar finding in many patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Despite the use of effective anti-inflammatory agents and disease modifying drugs, a significant proportion of patients with rheumatoid arthritis continue to have resistant disease. Complete clinical remission is unusual for more than six months and a formal cure of the disease remains elusive. In this report we focus on how attempts to address the question of why rheumatoid arthritis persists have led to a different interpretation of the pathogenesis of rheumatoid disease; one in which alterations in stromal cells such as fibroblasts play an important role in the switch from resolving to persistent disease.

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Buckley, C. D., Filer, A., Haworth, O., Parsonage, G., & Salmon, M. (2004). Defining a role for fibroblasts in the persistence of chronic inflammatory joint disease. In Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases (Vol. 63). https://doi.org/10.1136/ard.2004.028332

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