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Home > Health Information > E-Newsletters > Women's Health 

Family Provides Clues to Rheumatoid Arthritis

Women whose brothers are affected with painful rheumatoid arthritis are more likely to develop a severe form of the disease, says a report in Arthritis & Rheumatism. Picture of a family outside on a porch

The finding adds to growing evidence that genes play a key role in the autoimmune disorder, say experts.

"The importance of this study is that it is beginning to show us how multiple genetic factors can interact and regulate the development and course of rheumatoid arthritis (RA)," observes Dr. John Hardin, chief science officer of the Arthritis Foundation, and a rheumatologist at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York.

According to the Arthritis Foundation, about two million people in the US suffer from rheumatoid arthritis, an autoimmune, chronic inflammatory disease in which the joints can become extremely painful.

In persons with RA, the immune system has an abnormal response, mistaking the body's healthy tissue for a foreign invader and attacking it.

Brother's RA Sheds Light

Dr. Lindsey A. Criswell, the new study's lead author and a professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, explains that her team "compared the disease features among women who had no brothers with RA to the features of women with one or more brothers with RA."

The researchers focused on 1,004 affected members of 467 families in which two or more siblings have rheumatoid arthritis.

"We compared features of the disease in all the men and all the women," says Dr. Criswell, trying to build on what is already known about sex differences in the disease.

They found that women whose brothers were affected with the painful form of arthritis in which the body "turns" on itself were more likely to have high levels of an antibody associated with the disease, notes Dr. Criswell.

According to Dr. Criswell, this information could be useful to both physicians and patients to help predict the course of the disease.

It is already known that RA affects women three times as often as men, and that it strikes men later in life.

While women develop RA anywhere from adolescence to menopause, it is rarely seen in men under age 45.

Dr. Criswell's team found that while the disease occurs later in men, male patients showed more signs of "erosive" disease.

They were also more likely than women to test positive for rheumatoid factor and antibodies to "cyclic citrullinated peptides," or CCP, both hallmarks of the disease.

Men with RA were more likely to have a history of smoking and to have a gene called HLA-DRB1, a subtype of the genetic marker HLA-DR4, which is known to be associated with the disease.

Women whose brothers had RA also had higher anti-CCP antibodies and were more likely to have this gene, compared to females whose brothers do not have RA, lending support to the idea that the disease runs in families.

According to the Arthritis Foundation, people with the genetic marker HLA-DR4 may be at increased risk of getting RA; the marker is found in white blood cells and helps the body differentiate between its own cells and foreign invading ones.

"It has been clear for a long time that RA runs in families," says Dr. Criswell. "But like many diseases, the genetic cause is complex.

"There is not a single gene that determines who will and won't get it but rather a number of genes. We have been facing a challenge of identifying multiple genes in addition to environmental factors," she adds.

Genetic Factors Provide Information

Genetic information is helpful for a number of reasons. "[It] might influence how we treat them, and whether men or women are at greater risk," says Dr. Criswell.

Family histories might also alert the physician and the patient to expect the course of the disease to be more severe.

The study adds to our understanding of the disease, says Dr. Hardin.

"We have [identified] two genes so far, but it's clear other genes are involved," he says.

The take-home message of the study is that patients should tell their physician if they have a brother with the disease, says Dr. Hardin.

Rheumatologists, too, should remember to ask patients if other family members have the disease.

Always consult your physician for more information.

Rheumatoid Arthritis Defined

Rheumatoid arthritis, a chronic, autoimmune disease, is the most crippling form of arthritis and affects approximately 2.1 million Americans.

This chronic disease is characterized by painful and stiff joints on both sides of the body that may become enlarged and deformed.

Rheumatoid arthritis affects more women than men (70 percent of persons with rheumatoid arthritis are women).

Onset of the disease is usually middle-age, but it does occur in individuals as early as age 20. Patients with rheumatoid arthritis may also have osteoporosis, a progressive deterioration of bone density.

Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (JRA) is a form of arthritis in children ages 15 or younger that causes inflammation and stiffness of joints for more than six weeks.

Unlike adult rheumatoid arthritis, which is chronic and lasts a lifetime, children often outgrow juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. However, the disease can affect bone development in the growing child.

The exact cause of rheumatoid arthritis is not known. Rheumatoid arthritis is an autoimmune disorder, which means the body's immune system attacks its own healthy cells and tissues.

The response of the body causes inflammation in and around the joints, which then may lead to a destruction of the skeletal system.

Rheumatoid arthritis also may have devastating effects to other organs, such as the heart and lungs. Researchers believe certain factors, including heredity, may contribute to the onset of the disease.

What are the symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis?

The joints most commonly affected by rheumatoid arthritis are in the hands, wrists, feet, ankles, knees, shoulders, and elbows.

The disease typically causes inflammation symmetrically in the body, meaning the same joints are affected on both sides of the body. Symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis may begin suddenly or gradually.

The following are the most common symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis:

  • inflamed, painful joints

  • stiff joints

  • enlarged and/or deformed joints (such as fingers bent toward the little finger and/or swollen wrists)

  • frozen joints (joints that freeze in one position)

  • cysts behind the knees that may rupture, causing lower leg swelling and pain

  • hard nodules (bumps) under the skin near affected joints

  • low-grade fever

  • inflamed blood vessels (vasculitis) may occur occasionally, leading to nerve damage and leg sores

  • inflamed membranes around the lungs (pleurisy), the sac around the heart (pericarditis), or inflammation and scarring of the lungs themselves, that may lead to chest pain, difficulty breathing, and abnormal heart function

  • swollen lymph nodes

  • Sjögren's syndrome (dry eyes and mouth)

  • eye inflammation

If a person has four or more of the following symptoms, he/she may be diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis:

  • morning stiffness that lasts longer than one hour for at least six weeks

  • three or more joints that are inflamed for at least six weeks

  • presence of arthritis in the hand, wrist, or finger joints for at least six weeks

  • blood tests that reveal rheumatoid factor

  • x-rays that show characteristic changes in the joints

The symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis may resemble other medical conditions or problems, including acute rheumatic fever, Lyme disease, psoriatic arthritis, gout, osteoarthritis, gonococcal arthritis, and ankylosing spondylitis.

Always consult your physician for a diagnosis.

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