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NHS to review arthritis drugs use

For a lot of people waking up and finding your hands don't work is a reality faced daily.

One of the biggest reasons people use cannabis as medication here in the UK is in the treatment of the side effects of Rheumatoid Artheritis (RA) and the 'steroid' based drugs used to treat the condition, the side effects of which can be worse than the original condition including a far higher likleyhood of the patients condition turning into osteoporosis, or thinning of the bones.

'Arthritis' means inflammation of the joints.

Image
 RA is wide-spread in the UK


Rheumatoid arthritis is a common form of arthritis. About 1 in 50 people develop RA at some stage in their life. It can happen to anyone, and it is not a hereditary disease. It can develop at any age, but most commonly starts in middle adult life (aged 40-60). It is three times more common in women than in men.

 

NHS to review arthritis drugs use! 

The NHS treatment watchdog has agreed to review its guidance on the use of three drugs for rheumatoid arthritis.

The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) will look again at Humira, Enbrel and Remicade.

Last year it ruled if a patient did not respond to one of the drugs - from a class known as anti-TNF medicines - they should not get another, (so they are forced to consume cannabis in search of relief from constant chronic pain - we don't make this up you know).

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 Diagram of how a healthy joint looks

But various charities, manufacturers and the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) appealed against that decision.

The drugs will now undergo a further review of their NHS use.

The charity Arthritis Care said the original decision had meant "pain, disability and poverty" for many sufferers.

Neil Betteridge, the chief executive, said: "People eligible to receive anti-TNF treatment are, by definition, people with severe rheumatoid arthritis - a disease which, if left untreated, leads to serious disability, often at a young age.

"If not properly treated, those with the most severe form die on average within five years.

"It is fantastic that people may now get a second bite of the cherry.

"There are three drugs of this type, and obviously patients want to try the other two if the first does not work for them.

"The alternative is often a life on incapacity benefit, with no opportunity to live fully and productively."

Drugs work differently
Mr Betteridge said the three anti-TNF drugs had a different make-up, and each was administered in a different way.

"We argued that there is enough evidence to show that people often benefit from one anti-TNF having failed on another - quite enough evidence to justify the expense of permitting sequential use."

Around 400,000 people in the UK have rheumatoid arthritis, of which about 4,000 have severe rheumatoid arthritis.

A spokeswoman for NICE said: "Whilst the individual appeals were dismissed, the appeal panel decided that the appraisal committee needed to take another look at the use of a second anti-TNF treatment where there had been no response to a first anti-TNF treatment."

http://news.bbc.co.uk/

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