Rheumatoid arthritis meets precision medicine
For first time scientists
on way to predicting which drugs will help patients based on genetic profile of
disease
Scientists are bringing
precision medicine to rheumatoid arthritis for the first time by using genetic
profiling of joint tissue to see which drugs will work for which patients,
reports a new Northwestern Medicine multi-site study.
In the near future,
patients won't have to waste time and be disappointed with months of
ineffective therapy, scientists said.
"Now we can start to
predict which drugs a patient will respond to," said co-senior author
Harris Perlman, chief of rheumatology at Northwestern University Feinberg
School of Medicine. "We can truly do precision medicine for rheumatoid
arthritis. I believe this could be game changing. "
The paper was recently
published as an uncorrected proof in Arthritis & Rheumatology and
will be officially published in the journal in late May. Richard Pope and
Deborah Winter also are lead Northwestern authors.
Treatment for rheumatoid
arthritis now is trial and error.
"We have so many
different biologic drugs and there's no rhyme or reason to give one drug versus
the other," Perlman said. "We waste $2.5 billion a year in
ineffective therapy. And patients go through 12 weeks of therapy, don't respond
and get upset."
Scientists in the
multi-site study were the first in the U.S. to use ultrasound-guided therapy to
take a tissue biopsy in the affected joint. In the past, blood samples were
used to try to determine the effectiveness of the therapy and disease
progression.
"It's just like
oncology, where you go to the tumor," Perlman said. "Why go anywhere
else? In rheumatoid arthritis, we've never gone to the target organ."
Improved ultrasound
guided techniques make the new technique possible, Perlman said, noting joint
biopsies began in Europe about six years ago.
Scientists in the
six-site study analyzed the tissue in 41 rheumatoid arthritis patients,
separating out different immune cell populations. They focused on macrophages,
essentially the garbage collectors of the immune system that are overactive in
rheumatoid arthritis. These cells produce toxic, inflammatory proteins that
destroy the joints. Biologic therapy removes the protein molecules being
secreted by the macrophages.
The study included 30
patients from Northwestern and the remaining 11 from the University of Alabama
at Birmingham; Washington University, Columbia University, Mayo Clinic and
University of Michigan.
In the past, scientists
have tried to determine therapeutic effectiveness by separating patients into
groups based on their clinical parameters such as what antibodies they are
producing against themselves, how swollen their joints are and medications they
are taking. Then scientists tried to see if these parameters could predict
therapeutic efficacy. But that hasn't worked, Perlman said.
Instead, Perlman and
colleagues segregated patients based on the genes being produced by their
macrophages. They identified two patient groups who shared aspects of the
genetic profiles.
Next, the scientists
identified which of these patient populations had joints that were getting
better and what biologic therapies they were taking. They also identified a gene
sequence associated in patients with early disease. The earlier the patient is
treated, the more effective the therapy.
The next goal is to
predict which patients will have the best response -- based on their genetic
signature -- to a specific drug.
In a new study,
researchers are taking joint biopsy tissue from patients at the start of a new
therapy and then six weeks later to see if they can find a predictor gene
sequence that will clearly identify which patients respond to a particular
therapy.
"The idea is to
develop gene sequences to predict whether a patient will respond or not,"
Perlman said. "Our goal is that this procedure will become the standard of
care of for all patients with rheumatoid arthritis."
Story Source:
Materials provided
by Northwestern
University. Original written by Marla Paul. Note:
Content may be edited for style and length.
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