Abstract
BACKGROUND: Insomnia is markedly more prevalent in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients than in the general population and is closely linked to pain, fatigue, psychological comorbidities, and systemic inflammation. Evidence suggests a bidirectional relationship, where active disease worsens sleep quality, while poor sleep amplifies inflammatory activity and symptom severity. METHODS: A narrative review was conducted using PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, and Embase to identify studies from the last 15 years involving adult RA patients. Inclusion criteria required assessment of insomnia or sleep quality in relation to disease activity, treatment outcomes, or inflammatory markers. Data from clinical trials, cohort studies, and reviews were synthesized to examine prevalence, mechanisms, and therapeutic implications. RESULTS: Insomnia affects up to 45% of RA patients and correlates with higher DAS28 scores, elevated CRP/ESR, increased pain sensitivity, and reduced quality of life. Contributing factors include chronic pain, stiffness, elevated IL-6 and TNF-α, depression, anxiety, and medication side effects. Conventional DMARDs, corticosteroids, and biologics indirectly improve sleep via inflammation control, with IL-6 inhibition showing potential sleep-specific benefits. Psychotropic agents may help in comorbid depression/anxiety but are best combined with cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I). CONCLUSIONS: Insomnia is a prevalent, multifactorial problem in RA that adversely affects disease activity, symptom burden, and functional outcomes. Integrating sleep evaluation into routine RA management and adopting interdisciplinary strategies that address both inflammation and sleep disturbance may enhance patient outcomes. High-quality longitudinal studies using objective sleep measures are needed to clarify causal relationships and optimize therapy.