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Export BACKGROUND: Gender differences in the diagnosis and treatment of various diseases are increasingly being researched with the aim of optimizing treatment strategies and improving individual treatment success. METHODS: This paper summarizes the existing literature for gender differences in inflammatory rheumatic diseases. RESULTS: Many, but not all, inflammatory rheumatic diseases occur more frequently in women than in men. Women more often have a longer duration of symptoms until diagnosis than men, which may be due to different clinical and radiological presentations. Across diseases, women more often have lower remission and treatment response rates to antirheumatic medication compared to men. Discontinuation rates are also higher in women than in men. Whether women are more likely to develop anti-drug antibodies to biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs is still unclear. For Janus kinase inhibitors, there is no evidence of differential treatment response to date. CONCLUSION: Whether individual dosing regimens and gender-adapted remission criteria are also required in rheumatology cannot be deduced from the evidence available to date.
SEEK ID: https://ldh.drfz.imise.uni-leipzig.de/publications/84
DOI: 10.1007/s00108-023-01484-3
Projects: RABBIT (Rheumatoid Arthritis - Observation of Biologic Therapies)
Publication type: Journal
Journal: Inn Med (Heidelb)
Citation: Inn Med (Heidelb) 64(8):744-751
Date Published: 2023
URL: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36877237
Registered Mode: imported from a bibtex file
SubmitterViews: 42
Created: 15th Jul 2025 at 09:46
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https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3372-2021