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Bones and joints

Getting to the heart of the matter in rheumatoid arthritis in Ireland

Sinead Harney

Rheumatology Department, Cork University Hospital

1% of the world live with rheumatoid arthritis, that’s 21 million people: 45,000 of those live in Ireland.


Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic progressive autoimmune disease. It also affects the synovial joints predominantly of the hands and feet, in a symmetrical distribution1. Chronic inflammation results in progressive joint damage which as a result, can end in arthralgia, joint deformity, decreased functional ability, prolonged disability and sometimes premature death2. In fact 1%3 of the world have RA. For this reason about 3 million people living with RA in Europe. Similarly, according to Arthritis Ireland, 45,000 people suffer from the disease in this country.

RA is twice as common in women as men and the usual age of onset is between 35-50 years. 

Rheumatoid arthritis was only distinguished from gout and osteoarthritis in 1922.However, it had featured in the paintings of artists in the seventeenth century.

Rheumatoid arthritis mainly affects the synovial joints, but many patients have extra-articular manifestations which can be serious. In particular, there is a substantial excess of infection and vascular disease; 50% of deaths in RA patients are attributable to cardiovascular disease resulting in heart failure, stroke and myocardial infarction4. These can shorten life expectancy anything from three up to 18 years5.

Factors contributing to this increased risk include traditional cardiovascular (CV) risk factors. Hence, these included: age, gender, dyslipidaemia, hypertension, smoking, obesity and diabetes mellitis (DM), which partially explain the excess CV risk.

The need for more targeted treatment of cardiovascular risk

Comorbidities in patients with chronic diseases including RA have been shown to be under-recognised and under-treated with wide variability existing between countries with respect to their prevalence, detection and compliance with recommendations for prevention and management6. Guidelines published by EULAR advise aggressive management of these traditional risk factors with tight RA disease management to try and combat cardiovascular disease for these patients7.

As our department is similar to others in Ireland, we are engaging with others in Galway and Sligo to examine RA and CV more closely. All of this work highlights a need for more targeted treatment of cardiovascular risk and has led us to consider establishing an ANP-led cardiac clinic here in Cork University Hospital to address this deficit.


1: Aletaha et al 2010  |  2: Scheinecker al 2008  |  3: Shapira et al 2010  |  4: O’Sullivan 2014
5: Solomon et al 2003  |  6: Dougadas et al 2014  |  7: Agca et al 2017

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