Patient guide

Your guide to infusion therapy for rheumatology conditions

Infusion therapy can feel like a big step, especially if you have been managing symptoms with pills or self-injections. This guide explains when infusion therapy may be recommended, what problems it is designed to treat, and how we help patients feel prepared before treatment begins.

Medically reviewed by the physicians of Sunshine Rheumatology and Arthritis Center. Last updated March 2026.

Infusion treatment chair prepared for patient care

What infusion therapy means in rheumatology care

Infusion therapy delivers medication through an IV while you relax in a supervised clinical setting. In rheumatology, these medications are often biologic or specialty therapies used to calm the immune pathways driving inflammation.

Your rheumatologist may discuss infusion therapy when disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs, or DMARDs, are no longer enough on their own, when self-injections are not the best fit, or when your condition responds better to an IV treatment schedule.

Who this guide is for

  • Patients whose provider has recommended a biologic or specialty infusion medication
  • People comparing infusion therapy with oral medications or self-injections
  • Patients with rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, psoriatic arthritis, gout, or osteoporosis who want a clearer picture of next-step treatment
  • Families helping a loved one prepare for ongoing infusion visits

If you already know that an infusion has been scheduled, our first infusion appointment guide walks through what the visit day is typically like.

Common questions

When infusion therapy may be part of a care plan

Infusion therapy is usually not the first treatment step. It is often considered when inflammation remains active, symptoms are affecting daily life, or your provider believes a targeted medication may offer better control.

Rheumatoid arthritis

Infusion therapy may help when joint pain, swelling, and stiffness continue despite earlier medication changes.

Lupus

Some patients need more targeted control when lupus symptoms affect joints, skin, energy level, or other organ systems.

Psoriatic arthritis and related disease

Biologic infusion therapy may be part of treatment when joint inflammation or related symptoms remain active.

Gout

For severe or difficult-to-control gout, infusion therapy may be discussed when standard treatment has not been enough.

Osteoporosis

Some IV therapies are used to support bone health when fracture risk is high or oral treatment is not the best option.

Other autoimmune conditions

Your diagnosis, treatment history, lab work, and response to prior medications all help determine whether infusion therapy fits your plan.

What patients usually want to know first

  • How often the medication is given and how long visits usually last
  • Whether insurance approval is needed before treatment can be scheduled
  • What side effects or reactions are possible and how they are monitored
  • Whether it is safe to drive yourself home after treatment
  • How to plan work, meals, and rest around infusion days

We answer many of those questions in more detail on our infusion clinic page, which explains how supervised treatment works across our five offices.

Practical details national resources cannot cover

Organizations like ACR and NIH explain medications well, but they cannot tell you how scheduling, prior authorization, and nursing support work at your specific clinic. Our guides fill that gap so treatment feels less uncertain before it begins.

For example, patients in eastern Hillsborough County can visit our Brandon location page for details about local access, bilingual providers, and on-site infusion availability.

Related reading

Continue learning

Infusion clinic service details

See which conditions are treated, what to expect during a visit, and where infusion therapy is available across all five offices.

Trusted references

Use national resources for added background

When you want broader medication or condition information, we recommend the ACR medication guides and the NIH autoimmune diseases overview. These references support, but do not replace, guidance from your rheumatology team.

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