Abstract

Difficult-to-treat rheumatoid arthritis (D2T RA) is an area of high unmet need. The prevalence reported in the first D2T RA cohort studies ranged from 5.5-27.5%. Key to the definition is a conviction by patient and/or rheumatologist that disease management has become problematic and failure of at least two biological or targeted synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs. D2T RA is a multifactorial disease state which was reflected in data from D2T RA cohort studies: these pointed towards high prevalence of co-morbidities and/or lower socioeconomic status in D2T RA subgroups, while others had persistent symptoms without these factors being present. A holistic approach is necessary to identify the root problems underlying D2T RA in individual patients. In this review, biological and non-biological drivers that should be considered to be optimized will be discussed in view of what we have learned from patient data emerging from the first D2T RA cohort studies.

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