Comparable efficacy of standardized Ayurveda formulation and hydroxychloroquine sulfate (HCQS) in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA): a randomized investigator-blind controlled study |
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Authors: | Arvind Chopra Manjit Saluja Girish Tillu Anuradha Venugopalan Gumdal Narsimulu Rohini Handa Lata Bichile Ashwinikumar Raut Sanjeev Sarmukaddam Bhushan Patwardhan |
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Affiliation: | (1) Centre for Rheumatic Diseases (CRD), 1988 Convent Street, Hermes Elegance, Camp, Pune, 411001, India;(2) Interdisciplinary School of Health Sciences (SHS), University of Pune, Pune, 411007, India;(3) Rheumatology Department, Nizam Institute of Medical Sciences (NIMS), Panjagutta, Hyderabad, 500082, India;(4) Rheumatology Department, All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), Ansari Nagar, New Delhi, 110029, India;(5) Rheumatology Department, KEM Hospital and GS Medical College and SPARC, Parel, Mumbai, 400012, India |
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Abstract: | Hydroxychloroquine sulfate (HCQS) is a popular disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (DMARD) despite modest efficacy and toxicity.
Ayurveda (ancient India medicinal system) physicians treat rheumatoid arthritis (RA) with allegedly safer herbal formulations.
We report a head-to-head comparison in an exploratory drug trial. The objective is to compare standardized Ayurvedic formulations
and HCQS in the treatment of RA. One hundred twenty-one patients with active moderately severe RA (ACR 1988 classified) were
randomized into a 24-week investigator-blind, parallel efficacy, three-arm (two Ayurvedic and HCQS) multicenter drug trial
study; polyherb (Tinospora cordifolia and Zingiber officinale based) and monoherb (Semecarpus anacardium). Study measures included joint counts (pain/tenderness and swelling), pain visual analogue scale, global disease assessments,
and health assessment questionnaire. Oral meloxicam (fixed-dosage schedule) was prescribed to all patients during the initial
16 weeks. Patients on prednisolone could continue a fixed stable dose (<7.5 mg daily). Rescue oral use of paracetamol was
permitted and monitored. All groups matched well at baseline. An intent-to-treat analysis (ANOVA, significance P < 0.05) did not show significant differences by treatment groups. In the polyherb, monoherb, and HCQS arms, 44%, 36%, and
51%, respectively, showed ACR 20 index improvement. Several efficacy measures improved significantly in the HCQS and polyherb
groups with no difference between the groups (corrected P). However, the latter was individually superior to monoherb. Only mild adverse events (gut and skin, and none withdrew) were
reported with no differences between the groups. Forty-two patients dropped out. This preliminary drug trial controlled for
HCQS demonstrated a standardized Ayurvedic polyherb drug to be effective and safe in controlling active RA. A better-designed
study with a longer evaluation period is recommended. |
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