Current rheumatology guidelines recommend exercise as a key component in the management of people with RA, however, what is lacking is evidence on its impact on sleep. Objective is to assess the feasibility of a walking-based intervention on TST, sleep quality, and sleep disturbance and to generate potential effect size estimates for a main trial. Participants were recruited at weekly rheumatology clinics and through social media. Patients with RA were randomized to a walking-based intervention consisting of 28 sessions, spread over 8 weeks (2-5 times/week), with 1 per week being supervised by a physiotherapist, or to a control group who received verbal and written advice on the benefits of exercise. Primary outcomes were recruitment, retention, protocol adherence and participant experience. The study protocol was published and registered in ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03140995. One hundred and one (101) people were identified through clinics, 36 through social media. Of these, 24 met the eligibility criteria, with 20 randomized (18% recruitment; 100% female; mean age 57 (SD 7.3 years). Ten intervention participants (100%) and eight control participants (80%) completed final assessments, with both groups equivalent for all variables at baseline. Participants in the intervention group completed 87.5% of supervised sessions and 93% of unsupervised sessions. No serious adverse events were related to the intervention. Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index global score showed a significant mean improvement between the exercise group-6.6 (SD 3.3) compared to the control group-0.25 (SD 1.1) (p = 0.012); Intervention was feasible, safe and highly acceptable to study participants, with those participants in the exercise group reporting improvements in sleep duration and sleep quality compared to the control group. Based on these findings, a fully powered randomized trial is recommended. Trial registration number ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier NCT03140995 (April 25th, 2017).The aim of the study was to estimate the annual direct costs of biological therapies in rheumatoid arthritis (RA), and to establish possible factors associated with those costs. The main data source was the Moroccan registry of biological therapies in rheumatic diseases (RBSMR Registry). We included patients with available 1-year data. Variables related to socio-economic status, disease and biological therapy were collected. Direct costs included prices of biologics, costs of infusions, and subcutaneous injections. Differences in costs across groups were tested by Mann-Whitney and Kruskal-Wallis tests. Correlations analysis was performed in search of factors associated with high costs. We included 197 rheumatoid arthritis patients. The mean age was 52.3 ± 11 years, with female predominance 86.8%. Receiving one of the following therapies rituximab (n = 132), tocilizumab (n = 37), or TNF-blockers (n = 28). Median one-year direct costs per patient were €1665 [€1472-€9879]. The total annual direct costs were € 978,494. Rituximab, constituted 25.7% of the total annual budget. TNF-blockers and tocilizumab represented 27.3% and 47% of this overall budget, respectively. Although the costs were not significantly different in terms of gender or level of study, the insurance type significantly affected the cost estimation. A positive correlation was found between the annual direct cost and body mass index (r = 0.15, p = 0.04). In Morocco, a developing country, the annual direct costs of biological therapy are high. Our results may contribute to the development of strategies for better governance of these costs.To collect evidence on the application of ultrasound in skin assessment in patients with systemic sclerosis (SSc). The authors carried out a review of the literature via Pubmed MEDLINE database. The search terms were skin imaging in systemic sclerosis, ultrasound skin imaging in patients with systemic sclerosis. The selection and analysis of articles were performed by two independent evaluators. The authors analyzed 10 studies characterizing 470 patients with systemic sclerosis. The patients were young adults, mainly women. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/Perifosine.html The described methods of ultrasound were ultrasound elastography (7.14%), ultra-high-frequency (7.14%) and B-mode ultrasonographic imaging (21.43%), high-frequency ultrasonography (21.43%), shear-wave elastography (21.43%) and others (21.43%). Skin measurements reported in the analyzed studies were skin ultrasound in all studies, skin thickness (8 studies), skin elasticity (5 studies), skin stiffness (2 studies), subcutaneous tissue thickness (1 study). Ultrasound measurements were compared to different types of scales and measurements used in the description of disease progression. Ultrasound may be used in the clinical assessment of skin involvement in SSc. To the best of our knowledge, articles currently reporting the use of ultrasound in skin imaging show interesting ideas and provide basis for further research. Skin involvement in SSc assessed with ultrasound should be compared to skin biopsy. It is necessary to develop guidance for conducting skin measurements using ultrasound in patients with scleroderma. Currently, skin imaging in SSc is of limited clinical use due to a variety of methods and the lack of a standard operating procedure. The authors of analyzed studies suggested that high-frequency ultrasound provided a quantitative and reliable evaluation of dermal thickness in patients with SSc.To compare changes in low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and other lipids in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) randomised to a 1-year treat-to-target strategy with either adalimumab plus methotrexate or placebo plus methotrexate. Prespecified secondary analyses from the OPERA trial, where 180 early and treatment-naïve RA patients received methotrexate 20 mg once weekly in combination with either placebo or subcutaneous adalimumab 40 mg every other week. Serum lipid levels were measured at baseline and after 1 year. Changes in lipid levels were analysed using mixed linear models based on the intention-to-treat (ITT) population. Overall, 174 patients were included in the ITT population (adalimumab plus methotrexate n = 86; placebo plus methotrexate n = 88). Differences between changes in lipid levels were low-density lipoprotein cholesterol 0.18 mmol/l [95% CI - 0.05 to 0.42], total cholesterol 0.27 mmol/l [- 0.002 to 0.54], high-density lipoprotein cholesterol 0.05 mmol/l [- 0.06 to 0.15], triglycerides 0.