OA is the most common joint disorder in the world, but there are no approved therapeutics to prevent disease progression. Historically, OA has been considered a wear-and-tear joint disease, and efforts to identify and develop disease-modifying therapeutics have predominantly focused on direct inhibition of cartilage degeneration. However, there is now increasing evidence that inflammation is a key mediator of OA joint pathology, and also that the link between obesity and OA is not solely due to excessive loadbearing, suggesting therefore that targeting inflammation in OA could be a rewarding therapeutic strategy. In this review we therefore re-evaluate historical clinical trial data on anti-inflammatory therapeutics in OA patients, highlight some of the more promising emerging therapeutic targets and discuss the implications for future clinical trial design.
CITATION STYLE
Philp, A. M., Davis, E. T., & Jones, S. W. (2017, June 1). Developing anti-inflammatory therapeutics for patients with osteoarthritis. Rheumatology (United Kingdom). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/kew278
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