학술논문

Rheumatoid Arthritis: The Impact of Mental Health on Disease: A Narrative Review
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Rheumatology and Therapy. September, 2020, Vol. 7 Issue 3, p457, 15 p.
Subject
Rheumatoid factor -- Physiological aspects
Inflammation -- Care and treatment
Antiarthritic agents -- Physiological aspects
Mental health -- Physiological aspects
Arthritis -- Care and treatment
Adalimumab -- Physiological aspects
Sleep disorders -- Care and treatment
Language
English
Abstract
Over 60% of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients achieve a good response after 12 months of treatment when following the European league against rheumatism (EULAR) guidelines for treatment. However, almost half of patients still suffer from moderate to severe disease activity despite this. In addition, mental health problems may remain despite reduced measures of inflammation systemically and within joints. Depression is two times more common in RA patients than in the general population, and intriguingly a bi-directional relationship with RA has been shown in cross-sectional studies. Chronic inflammation impairs the physiological responses to stress including effective coping behaviours, resulting in depression, which leads to a worse long-term outcome in RA. In RA patients, the pain score is not always solely related to inflammatory arthritis and immunological disease activity by Bak et al. (Patient Prefer Adherence 13:223-231, [1]). Non-inflammatory pain secondary to anxiety, depression, sleep disturbance and the psychosocial situation needs to be considered whilst fibromyalgia, mechanical pain and neuropathic pain can also contribute to overall pain scores by Chancay et al. (Women's Midlife Health 5:3, [2]). Hence, the UK National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guideline for the management of RA included psychological interventions for fatigue, low mood and social well-being (NICE NG100, 2018) [3], and the NICE clinical guidelines (CG91) [4] suggest managing mental health and depression in chronic medical conditions to improve treatment outcomes. This is a narrative review of the impact of mental health on RA disease activity in terms of patient-reported outcomes (PROs).
Author(s): May N. Lwin [sup.1], Lina Serhal [sup.1], Christopher Holroyd [sup.1], Christopher J. Edwards [sup.1] Author Affiliations: (1) https://ror.org/0485axj58, grid.430506.4, University Hospital Southampton, , Southampton, UK Key Summary Points Rheumatoid [...]