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W. B. Harrison, B. A. C. Dijkmans During the last decade
intervention has been instituted for all kinds of disease- even in
a premorbid state, as early as possible, to control the activity of
the disease, to avoid further damage and to maintain quality of
life. Apart from the principle 'Treat now, not later," emphasis is
laid on aggressive initial therapy. These adagia have influenced in
recent times all fields of medicine, from oncology to infectious
diseases and also - the topic of the present edition - the
"autoimmune diseases." As an example of the latter, rheumatoid
arthritis (RA) demonstrates how the attitude of physicians has been
changed. From an expectant point of view in the eighties (primum
nil nocere) the attitude has been changed, as we approached and
entered the new millennium, to initial ag gressive therapy
especially in patients with a poor prognosis. Despite the advance
of instituting monotherapy with a single optimised
disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drug (DMARD) - with methotrexate
as prototype agent in RA - adequate disease re mission is not often
achieved, and adverse events may well prevent the use of higher
dosages of the single agent in question. Therefore, the next step
was to combine two or more DMARDs. The choice of combining DMARDs
can be purely practical and based upon the anti-rheumatics most
used in daily practice, for instance methotrexate and
sulphasalazine. The choice of combining drugs can be influenced by
different toxicity patterns to avoid cumulative toxicity."
W. B. Harrison, B. A. C. Dijkmans During the last decade
intervention has been instituted for all kinds of disease- even in
a premorbid state, as early as possible, to control the activity of
the disease, to avoid further damage and to maintain quality of
life. Apart from the principle 'Treat now, not later," emphasis is
laid on aggressive initial therapy. These adagia have influenced in
recent times all fields of medicine, from oncology to infectious
diseases and also - the topic of the present edition - the
"autoimmune diseases." As an example of the latter, rheumatoid
arthritis (RA) demonstrates how the attitude of physicians has been
changed. From an expectant point of view in the eighties (primum
nil nocere) the attitude has been changed, as we approached and
entered the new millennium, to initial ag gressive therapy
especially in patients with a poor prognosis. Despite the advance
of instituting monotherapy with a single optimised
disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drug (DMARD) - with methotrexate
as prototype agent in RA - adequate disease re mission is not often
achieved, and adverse events may well prevent the use of higher
dosages of the single agent in question. Therefore, the next step
was to combine two or more DMARDs. The choice of combining DMARDs
can be purely practical and based upon the anti-rheumatics most
used in daily practice, for instance methotrexate and
sulphasalazine. The choice of combining drugs can be influenced by
different toxicity patterns to avoid cumulative toxicity."
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