AI Article Synopsis

  • Giant cell arteritis (GCA) and polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR) are inflammatory conditions often treated together under the term GCA-PMR spectrum disease (GPSD), both showing strong responses to glucocorticoid treatment.
  • These conditions vary significantly in their risks for complications, treatment responses, and relapse rates, requiring a detailed stratification approach based on patient characteristics and clinical data.
  • Patients with cranial symptoms have a higher risk of immediate vision loss but fewer long-term relapses, while those with large-vessel involvement face different challenges, highlighting the need for tailored management strategies.

Article Abstract

Giant cell arteritis (GCA) and polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR) are closely related conditions characterized by systemic inflammation, a predominant IL-6 signature, an excellent response to glucocorticoids, a tendency to a chronic and relapsing course, and older age of the affected population. This Review highlights the emerging view that these diseases should be approached as linked conditions, unified under the term GCA-PMR spectrum disease (GPSD). In addition, GCA and PMR should be seen as non-monolithic conditions, with different risks of developing acute ischaemic complications and chronic vascular and tissue damage, different responses to available therapies and disparate relapse rates. A comprehensive stratification strategy for GPSD, guided by clinical findings, imaging and laboratory data, facilitates appropriate therapy and cost-effective use of health-economic resources. Patients presenting with predominant cranial symptoms and vascular involvement, who usually have a borderline elevation of inflammatory markers, are at an increased risk of sight loss in early disease but have fewer relapses in the long term, whereas the opposite is observed in patients with predominant large-vessel vasculitis. How the involvement of peripheral joint structures affects disease outcomes remains uncertain and understudied. In the future, all cases of new-onset GPSD should undergo early disease stratification, with their management adapted accordingly.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41584-023-00976-8DOI Listing

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