Poster Session C
Spondyloarthritis (SpA) including psoriatic arthritis (PsA)
Siba Raychaudhuri, MD
UC Davis, School of Medicine/ VA Medical Center, Sacramento
Davis, CA, United States
1. Enthesitis likely to be a dominant pathology in PsA. TB-PET/CT scans were able to detect inflammation in significantly higher number of entheses ( >20%) when compared to rheumatologic examination of a specific clinical measure.
2. Our findings provides direct in-vivo evidence suggesting that the pathologic events in the DIP joints are largely entheseal based. We are generating data on larger patient population and expecting to substantiate this observation which will provide a broader understanding of the disease process of PsA.
3. In addition, this in-vivo imaging study provides the systemic burden of enthesitis (rSUVmax) in PsA. TB-PET/CT imaging will be able to quantify and monitor enthesial inflammatory burden in a patient and its therapeutic response.