Research

From arthritis to lupus, sex and gender in rheumatology influence diagnosis and treatment

The point in an international review involving the Reference Centre for Gender Medicine of the Istituto Superiore di Sanità and published in Nature Reviews Rheumatology

by Health Review

 (Adobe Stock)

2' min read

Translated by AI
Versione italiana

2' min read

Translated by AI
Versione italiana

Rheumatological diseases are not the same for everyone. Biological sex and gender significantly influence diagnosis, symptoms, response to drugs and prognosis, making their structural inclusion in clinical practice and in the design of studies, registries and guidelines necessary. This is what emerges from an international review involving the Reference Centre for Gender Medicine of the Istituto Superiore di Sanità, and published in Nature Reviews Rheumatology.

The Studio

Research shows important differences in prevalence and diagnosis between men and women in the main autoimmune rheumatological diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus and spondyloarthritis. In particular, rheumatoid arthritis and lupus predominantly affect women, while spondyloarthritis is more frequent in men.

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According to the authors, in some rheumatological diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis and spondyloarthritis, women are often diagnosed later and their symptoms tend to be underestimated or misinterpreted. One possible cause is the historical under-representation of the gender less affected by these diseases in clinical studies and research.

Gender matters

Differences also emerge in clinical and therapeutic terms: women more frequently report intense pain and fatigue and may show a different response to treatments, particularly to biological and immunomodulating drugs. They also report side effects more frequently and reach remission less often.

The study also points to a significant lack of data on transgender, non-binary and intersex people, who are still underrepresented in clinical research, with implications for the possibility of developing truly inclusive guidelines.

Finally, the authors emphasise how the systematic integration of sex and gender in rheumatology research and practice can improve diagnostic accuracy, treatment efficacy and equity of care, fostering the development of more representative studies and personalised treatment approaches.

'Sex and gender are not secondary variables,' emphasises the director of the Reference Centre for Gender Medicine, Elena Ortona, 'but factors that concretely influence diagnosis, clinical course and response to therapy in rheumatological diseases. Their systematic integration in research, clinical practice and guidelines is indispensable for a more precise, effective and equitable medicine'.

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