Gene profiling in white blood cells predicts infliximab responsiveness in rheumatoid arthritis

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Abstract

As indicators of responsiveness to a tumour necrosis factor (TNF)α blocking agent (infliximab) are lacking in rheumatoid arthritis, we have used gene profiling in peripheral blood mononuclear cells to predict a good versus poor response to infliximab. Thirty three patients with very active disease (Disease Activity Score 28 >5.1) that resisted weekly methotrexate therapy were given infliximab at baseline, weeks 2 and 6, and every 8th week thereafter. The patients were categorized as responders if a change of Disease Activity Score 28 = 1.2 was obtained at 3 months. Mononuclear cell RNAs were collected at baseline and at three months from responders and nonresponders. The baseline RNAs were hybridised to a microarray of 10,000 non-redundant human cDNAs. In 6 responders and 7 non-responders, 41 mRNAs identified by microarray analysis were expressed as a function of the response to treatment and an unsupervised hierarchical clustering perfectly separated these responders from non-responders. The informativeness of 20 of these 41 transcripts, as measured by qRT-PCR, was reassessed in 20 other patients. The combined levels of these 20 transcripts properly classified 16 out of 20 patients in a leaveone-out procedure, with a sensitivity of 90% and a specificity of 70%, whereas a set of only 8 transcripts properly classified 18/20 patients. Trends for changes in various transcript levels at three months tightly correlated with treatment responsiveness and a down-regulation of specific transcript levels was observed in non-responders only. Our gene profiling obtained by a noninvasive procedure should now be used to predict the likely responders to an infliximab/methotrexate combination. © 2006 Lequerré et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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Lequerré, T., Gauthier-Jauneau, A. C., Bansard, C., Derambure, C., Hiron, M., Vittecoq, O., … Salier, J. P. (2006). Gene profiling in white blood cells predicts infliximab responsiveness in rheumatoid arthritis. Arthritis Research and Therapy, 8(4). https://doi.org/10.1186/ar1990

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