No permanent cure is proven for rheumatoid arthritis
Start disease-modifying therapy early (DMARDs) under a rheumatologist
Use methotrexate as first-line treatment when appropriate
Consider other conventional DMARDs if needed (leflunomide, sulfasalazine, hydroxychloroquine)
Use combination DMARD therapy when appropriate
Add a biologic DMARD if disease remains active (TNF inhibitors, IL-6 inhibitors, abatacept, rituximab, others)
Consider targeted synthetic DMARDs if needed (JAK inhibitors such as tofacitinib, baricitinib, upadacitinib)
Aim for sustained remission or low disease activity with treat-to-target management
Monitor regularly with symptoms and lab markers (ESR/CRP) and adjust therapy promptly
Follow vaccination and infection-prevention guidance before and during immunosuppressive therapy
Manage pain and inflammation with short-term or bridging medications when appropriate (NSAIDs, corticosteroids at the lowest effective dose and shortest duration)
Avoid smoking and limit alcohol; maintain a healthy weight
Engage in regular low-impact exercise (walking, swimming, cycling) and range-of-motion/strengthening as tolerated
Use physical and occupational therapy for joint protection, mobility, and function
Optimize sleep and stress management
Follow an anti-inflammatory dietary pattern (e.g., Mediterranean-style); ensure adequate protein and nutrients
Screen and treat comorbidities (cardiovascular risk, osteoporosis, anemia, lung disease)
Ensure bone protection if using corticosteroids (calcium/vitamin D and osteoporosis meds when indicated)
Consider surgical options for severe joint damage (joint repair/replacement) to restore function, not to cure disease
Seek prompt care for flares and medication side effects
Do not stop or change DMARDs without rheumatology guidance
Participate in structured RA care programs and maintain medication adherence
