A new clinical trial has uncovered striking statistics on rheumatoid arthritis prevention using abatacept immunotherapy. The study found that one year of treatment delayed disease onset by up to four years, with 25 percent of high-risk patients completely avoiding development of clinically manifest rheumatoid arthritis during the follow-up period.
Enrolling 213 individuals with joint pain and autoantibodies, researchers at Amsterdam University Medical Centers demonstrated that abatacept’s T-cell blocking mechanism provides durable protection. The sustained benefits observed years after treatment cessation suggest the drug may fundamentally interrupt the autoimmune cascade leading to disease.
These results represent the first successful preventive intervention for rheumatoid arthritis in at-risk populations and may reshape clinical approaches to early intervention strategies in autoimmune disease.
Read the full article on GMJ Newsroom.
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