Abstract

Modern pathogenetic therapy of inflammatory rheumatic diseases (IRD) is aimed not only at reducing disease activity (although achieving remission and low disease activity remains the main goal of treatment), but also at eliminating as quickly and completely as possible the main symptoms that cause a decrease in the quality of life of patients. Particular importance is attached to effective control of chronic pain – the main and most distressing manifestation of IRD. To solve this problem, the pathogenesis of chronic pain in IRD continues to be actively studied, aimed at finding new ”targets” of pharmacotherapy. Thus, the role of central sensitization (CS) and comorbid fibromyalgia in the formation of clinical manifestations of IRD is now clearly proven. Signs of CS, depending on the instrument of its detection, are determined in 20–40% of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), psoriatic arthritis (PsA) and axial spondyloarthritis (AxSpA).Interleukin (IL) 17 plays a fundamental role in the development of chronic pain in IIRD. This cytokine takes a leading position in the development of the ”cytokine cascade”, inducing the synthesis of various cytokines and chemokines, as well as chemotaxis and activation of neutrophils and T cells. Induction of synthesis of inflammatory mediators (including prostaglandin E2) determines the role of IL-17 in activation of nociceptors and their sensitization. IL-17 also takes an active part in neuroimmune interactions by activating glia cells and affecting receptors present on the membrane of neurons of the posterior horns of the spinal cord. This defines the role of IL-17 as one of the inductors of CS development. Pharmacologic blockade of IL-17 is a known pathway to suppress the activity of IIRPs such as PsA and AxSpA. However, this mechanism also allows for significant effects on chronic pain. In particular, the IL-17 inhibitor ixekizumab has shown high analgesic potential in a series of studies in PsA and AxSpA (SPIRIT-P1 and SPIRIT-P2, COAST V and COAST W). It is important to note that this drug demonstrated a very rapid analgesic effect: pain intensity was significantly reduced already 7 days after the first injection. These data suggest a specific effect of ixekizumab on the nociceptive system, independent of the anti-inflammatory effect. This fact allows us to consider ixekizumab as a drug of choice for the treatment of patients with PsA and AxSpA who experience severe pain and have signs of CS and fibromyalgia.

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