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Anti-inflammatory drug may unleash TB. (Biomedicine).


Physicians prescribing a drug that counteracts arthritis and other inflammatory diseases may in rare cases awaken dormant tuberculosis, researchers report in the Oct. 11 NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE The New England Journal of Medicine (New Engl J Med or NEJM) is an English-language peer-reviewed medical journal published by the Massachusetts Medical Society. It is one of the most popular and widely-read peer-reviewed general medical journals in the world. .

The drug, called infliximab and known by the trade name Remicade, suppresses a protein called tumor necrosis factor-alpha Tumor necrosis factor (TNF, cachexin or cachectin and formally known as tumor necrosis factor-alpha) is a cytokine involved in systemic inflammation and is a member of a group of cytokines that all stimulate the acute phase reaction. , or TNF-alpha, an immune system protein that causes swelling.

Physician Joseph Keane of Boston University School of Medicine Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) is one of the graduate schools of Boston University. It is an American medical school located in the South End neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts.  noticed that a patient on infliximab had come down with tuberculosis. Keane, who studies TNF-alpha when he's not seeing patients, recalled earlier reports that TNF-alpha protects mice from tuberculosis: So, Keane and his colleagues reviewed 69 other cases of tuberculosis in patients with inflammatory conditions who also had received infliximab. Most of the 70 patients were living in the United States or Europe.

From the results, the researchers estimated that the incidence of TB among rheumatoid arthritis patients receiving infliximab in the United States is more than 24 in 100,000 people. Among rheumatoid arthritis patients not getting infliximab, the rate is about 6 per 100,000.

The findings suggest that some people have smoldering smol·der also smoul·der  
intr.v. smol·dered, smol·der·ing, smol·ders
1. To burn with little smoke and no flame.

2.
, symptomfree TB that infliximab permits to flare up to become suddenly heated or excited; to burst into a passion.
- Thackeray.

See also: Flare
. Keane says that anyone about to start infliximab therapy should receive a TB skin test to reveal any tuberculosis infection. --N.S.
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Title Annotation:in some cases, infliximab may activate dormant tuberculosis
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Nov 10, 2001
Words:210
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