Christine - Interview 64

On anti-TNF therapy; Cimzia and on medication for breathlessness. She attributes her breathing difficulties to another RA drug, methotrexate. Christinesays that living with RA is not her main health issue, but breathing problems do affect her physically and sometimes emotionally.
Married, with two grown up daughters and retired. Christine stressed that the care she has received from her rheumatology hospital is 'second to none' in terms of efficiency, medical care excellence and health professional-patient communication.
More about me...
Christine was diagnosed in 2005 and since then she has taken several different medications to try and control her RA. Her experience with RA medications suggests that they have either not worked; or they have worked for a while; or were discontinued because of their side effects. She is currently on anti-TNF therapy; Cimzia, which has significantly improved her condition. One main reason why she preferred Cimzia over other anti-TNF medication was that she found the handle of the pre-filled syringes easy to use for someone with restricted hand mobility. Before Cimzia, and among other symptoms, Christine suffered from stiff, painful and very swollen hands.
For about six months and prior to anti-TNF therapy, Christine was given no RA medication. Her previous drug; Leflunomide had worked well for a while but then it became ineffective and gave her very unpleasant side effects. Christine explains that doctors wanted her to eliminate any traces of Leflunomide in her body before she started on anti-TNF medication. During her ‘detox’ period Christine was having predniselone to alleviate her symptoms of breathlessness.
After taking methotrexate for about two years, Christine began to suffer from breathlessness – something she never experienced before she took this drug. She is convinced that methotrexate is to blame for her breathing problems. She says those doctors, and after establishing that she doesn’t smoke, are at a lost as to what caused it and always asked if she has taken methotrexate. She is on inhalers but their benefits wear off before she is due the next dosage. At the time of the interview, Christine was due to start using a nebulizer machine at home.
Christine stressed that the care she has received from her rheumatology hospital is ‘second to none’ in terms of efficiency, medical care excellence and health-professional-patient communication but, in comparison, she is disappointed with the level of care she has received at her local hospital that is dealing with her breathing problems. One of her main criticism is that they are too slow at liaising with her GP. Her GP, on the other hand, was described as a very good support.
Christine says that living with RA is not her main health issue, but breathing problems do affect her physically and sometimes emotionally.
Christine leaves her Cimzia injection out of the fridge for well over half an hour before injecting.
Christine leaves her Cimzia injection out of the fridge for well over half an hour before injecting.
Some people have described Cimzia as being a very thick liquid…?
Christine finds the Cimzia prefilled syringe very easy to use. To some extent, it was the features of the syringe that helped her decide for this anti-TNF medication.
Christine finds the Cimzia prefilled syringe very easy to use. To some extent, it was the features of the syringe that helped her decide for this anti-TNF medication.
When I was in the hospital and she came up and she spent the whole afternoon with me with a load of injection things telling me the ins and outs of each of them and the reason I chose Cimzia, one of the reasons I chose Cimzia is that the top, as you take the injection out of the packet… the top is like a pen top with the If you can imagine here, it’s like yeah, it’s got a nice big loop on it and at the time my hands were bad and I thought, ‘Ah, that’s alright because I can get a finger in there and pull on,’ whereas some of these little tiny caps are very difficult to pull off.So that’s a reason I, and that’s the only reason; to me they were much of a muchness but it was the ease of getting the cap off and when you push the syringe to get and make sure the liquid was up to the needle, you know, you’ve got a great big, I’ll show you later, they’ve got, you’ve got a nice big rubber thing to hold on to and if your hands are not good you need that. So that is why and you know, she said, “There’s not a lot of difference in them but they’ve all got this, some have got this, somes got something else,” and I said, “What do you think of those?” she said, “It’s a very good one.” So Cimzia it was.