Abstract
In a prospective, randomized, single-blind study of 116 patients with early rheumatoid arthritis (mean disease duration 7 months), therapeutic activity of intra-articular rifamycin SV (525 mg/week) infiltration into each peripheral joint over 10 weeks was compared with that of 3 mg auranofin given orally twice daily. The incidence of side-effects was lower in rifamycin-treated patients. At the end of follow-up, the clinical variables and erythrocyte sedimentation rate showed a significant and persistant improvement both in 16 patients who continued the auranofin treatment regularly and in 55 treated with rifamycin who had completed the therapeutic cycle 62.5 months before; the latex test decreased only in the rifamycin group. In patients treated with auranofin or who changed to other commonly used antirheumatic agents, 57% of those with an initially negative radiological picture developed new radiological lesions in at least one of the small joints compared with 9% in the rifamycin group. Although the number of patients treated with rifamycin was small and the follow-up relatively short, the results of the study indicated that treatment with intra-articular rifamycin SV may prevent the appearance of radiological lesions in patients with early rheumatoid arthritis and normal radiographs initially.
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