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How would you manage axial stiffness without pain in an elderly gentleman with a distant history of HLA-B27+ axial and peripheral spondyloarthritis, now with SI joint fusion, no peripheral arthritis, normal inflammatory markers, and no response to TNF inhibition?

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Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Rheumatology · Texas Christian University

Based on the history and lack of response to anti-TNF therapy, I suspect the patient does not currently have active inflammatory disease but likely sequalae of prior damage and degenerative spinal disease as a cause of his stiffness. A trial off of the biologic would help assess if the medication is...

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Mednet Member
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Rheumatology · OHSU

The two most important points given here in the limited history are “no pain” and “normal inflammatory markers”. That changed my approach for aggressive management in this ‘elderly’ person. I would like to understand how this stiffness is affecting his daily lifestyle. Is this more of a prolonged mo...

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Mednet Member
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Rheumatology · Berkshire Health Systems

Further information is needed in order to properly determine what the "stiffness" means: inflammatory vs. non-inflammatory.

Certainly, in the absence of any clinical response, stopping the TNFi agent would be prudent; if there is worsening of symptoms, then perhaps it was actually working but not we...

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