NEW DELHI: Scientists have discovered that rheumatoid arthritis (RA) silently starts years earlier, long before symptoms appear, an advance that may pave the way for earlier treatment and prevention.
RA is a debilitating autoimmune disease that causes painful joint inflammation and damage.
The new research, published in the journal Science Translational Medicine, reveals that during the early phase of RA, the body fights an autoimmune battle invisibly.
This wasn't a localised joint inflammation, but rather a body-wide inflammatory state that resembles what's seen in people with active RA.
"Overall, we hope this study raises awareness that rheumatoid arthritis begins much earlier than previously thought and that it enables researchers to make data-driven decisions on strategies to disrupt disease development, " said Mark Gillespie, assistant investigator at the Allen Institute, US.
During the seven-year study, researchers tracked several people carrying ACPA antibodies -- known biomarkers for individuals at risk for developing RA. They also identified previously unknown factors associated with disease development, including widespread inflammation, immune cell dysfunction, and cellular reprogramming.
The team found that among people at risk of RA, several types of immune cells had significant abnormalities. B cells, which normally produce protective antibodies, had shifted toward a pro-inflammatory state.