Redefining Rheumatoid Arthritis Management: Molecular Mechanisms, Extra-Articular Manifestations, and Next-Generation Therapeutic Strategies
Sachin Sajane
Department of Pharmacology, Annasaheb Dange College of B Pharmacy, Ashta, Sangli, Maharashtra, India.
Yash Gore
Department of Pharmacology, Annasaheb Dange College of B Pharmacy, Ashta, Sangli, Maharashtra, India.
Yasmin Momin
Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, Annasaheb Dange College of B Pharmacy, Ashta, Sangli, Maharashtra, India.
Prakash Nargatti *
Department of Pharmacology, Annasaheb Dange College of B Pharmacy, Ashta, Sangli, Maharashtra, India.
Guruprasad Sutar
Department of Pharmacology, Annasaheb Dange College of B Pharmacy, Ashta, Sangli, Maharashtra, India.
Rajkumar Bagli
Department of Pharmacology, Annasaheb Dange College of B Pharmacy, Ashta, Sangli, Maharashtra, India.
Mahesh Saralaya
Department of Pharmacology, Annasaheb Dange College of B Pharmacy, Ashta, Sangli, Maharashtra, India.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
Rheumatoid arthritis remains the most common chronic inflammatory joint disease in adults and continues to impose substantial disability, premature cardiovascular mortality, and systemic morbidity despite four decades of therapeutic innovation. Although disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs and biologic agents have transformed outcomes for many patients, a persistent minority fail to reach sustained remission, and the disease's extra-articular face, spanning the lungs, vasculature, and gut, remains comparatively under-addressed in routine practice. This review synthesises contemporary evidence on the molecular and immunological architecture of rheumatoid arthritis, including genetic susceptibility, citrullination-driven autoimmunity, the aggressive phenotype acquired by synovial fibroblasts, and the cytokine and intracellular signalling networks that sustain joint destruction. It then turns to the systemic dimensions of the disease, considering pulmonary, cardiovascular, vasculitic, and mucosal manifestations that frequently determine prognosis independently of articular disease activity. The therapeutic discussion examines the maturing landscape of targeted synthetic and biologic agents, the expanding role of biosimilars in widening access, early clinical experience with chimeric antigen receptor T-cell and other cell-based approaches, and the slow but meaningful progress towards biomarker-guided precision prescribing. A dedicated discussion addresses the treat-to-target paradigm and the emerging recognition that a sizeable proportion of patients meet criteria for difficult-to-treat disease, a state that demands an integrated rather than purely pharmacological response. Throughout, the review highlights where mechanistic insight has, and has not yet, been translated into changes in clinical practice, and proposes that future progress will depend less on new drug classes alone than on better matching of existing and emerging tools to the right patient at the right time.
Keywords: Rheumatoid arthritis, molecular pathogenesis, extra-articular manifestations, biologic therapy, Janus kinase inhibitors, precision medicine, Difficult-to-treat disease