Medicine:Disease-modifying treatment
From HandWiki
A disease-modifying treatment, disease-modifying drug, or disease-modifying therapy is a treatment that delays, slows or reverses the progression of a disease by targeting its underlying cause.[1] They are distinguished from symptomatic treatments that treat the symptoms of a disease but do not address its underlying cause.[2]
Examples
- Disease-modifying osteoarthritis drug
- Disease-modifying antirheumatic drug
References
- ↑ McFarthing, Kevin; Rafaloff, Gary; Baptista, Marco; Mursaleen, Leah; Fuest, Rosie; Wyse, Richard K.; Stott, Simon R.W. (2022-05-24). "Parkinson's Disease Drug Therapies in the Clinical Trial Pipeline: 2022 Update". Journal of Parkinson's Disease 12 (4): 1073–1082. doi:10.3233/JPD-229002. PMID 35527571.
- ↑ "Symptomatic Versus Disease-Modifying Therapies for Movement Disorders - Parkinson's and Movement Disorder Foundation". https://pmdf.org/articles/2013-fall-Symptomatic-Versus-%20Disease-Modifying%20Therapies.php.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disease-modifying treatment.
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