TNF Inhibitors (Adalimumab)

Why Is This Treatment Needed?

TNF inhibitors such as Adalimumab are used when first-line medicines like methotrexate, leflunomide, or sulfasalazine do not adequately control disease.
They are effective in treating rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, and ankylosing spondylitis by reducing inflammation and preventing further joint and tissue damage.

How Do TNF Inhibitors Work?

In arthritis, the body’s own immune cells start to attack the joints, causing swelling, pain, and stiffness.
TNF inhibitors stop this process, helping reduce pain, swelling, and stiffness while protecting the joints from further damage.

Dosing (Sri Lanka)

In Sri Lanka, Adalimumab is usually given as an injection once every two weeks.
Once good disease control is achieved, the dose may be extended (e.g. once every 3 weeks, once a month, or even up to once in 3 months depending on symptoms, blood tests and your doctor’s judgement ).
This helps to reduce cost while maintaining control.

Pre-Treatment Screening

Before starting TNF inhibitors, your doctor will arrange:

  • Routine blood tests (blood counts, liver and kidney function)
  • Chest X-ray and sometimes an ultrasound scan
  • TB screening and hepatitis screening
  • Referral to both a physician and a cardiologist for medical clearance and to check whether it is safe for you to start treatment
When Will I Notice Benefits?

Many patients notice improvement in 2–6 weeks, but full benefits may take 3 months.
Continue treatment regularly, even if symptoms improve early.

Important Safety Considerations

Because TNF inhibitors lower the immune response, there is a rare risk of infections.
If you develop fever, cough, chest pain, or breathlessness, stop the medicine and contact your doctor immediately.

Vaccinations: Always inform your physician before receiving any vaccine. Live vaccines are usually not recommended while on treatment.

Monitoring and Safety Checks

Regular blood tests, chest X-rays, and follow-up reviews will be scheduled to check safety and monitor disease activity.

Without monitoring, you may risk drug side effects or disease flares that can lead to permanent joint damage.

Your rheumatologist will ensure safe use with regular monitoring.

Combination with Other Medicines

Because Adalimumab is costly, it is often used in combination with:

  • Methotrexate (to improve effectiveness and reduce the chance of drug resistance)
  • Steroids or other DMARDs

This helps reduce the cost by allowing more sparing use of Adalimumab.

Key Reminders
  1. Given as an injection — usually once every 2 weeks.
  2. Can be extended to once every 3–4 weeks, once a month, or even up to once in 3 months depending on response and your doctor’s advice.
  3. Pre-treatment: Blood tests, chest X-ray, ultrasound scan, TB and hepatitis screening, physician and cardiologist clearance.
  4. Monitor regularly with blood tests and reviews by your rheumatologist.
  5. Stop and contact your doctor if you develop fever, cough, chest pain, or breathlessness.
  6. Always inform your physician before receiving vaccines.
  7. Often combined with methotrexate or steroids to improve results and reduce cost.
Further Information

For more details, see the Australian Rheumatology Association (ARA) patient leaflet on TNF Inhibitors: