Rheumatology
Clinical discussions on autoimmune diseases, biologic therapies, vasculitis, and musculoskeletal conditions.
Recent Discussions
Is your approach to managing immune related adverse events altered at all in light of COVID-19?
First of all, I wish to thank @Dr. First Last from Johns Hopkins/Sibley for his advice addressing this critical topic.We are all witnessing a rapidly evolving crisis that none of us have been prepared for and it is the right thing to quickly consider as best as we can how the COVID-19 pandemic shoul...
Should the use of avacopan be limited to those patients at increased risk of steroid toxicity given the anticipated high cost of this medication?
Once Avacopan is available for clinical use in the treatment of patients with AAV, providers will need to carefully weigh risks and benefits of the medication while considering other factors including cost.The ADVOCATE trial used a novel glucocorticoid toxicity index that captures common GC-related ...
What is your approach to management of a patient with sarcoidosis who is asymptomatic, but demonstrates progressively enlarging mediastinal lymphadenopathy and rising soluble IL-2 receptor levels?
My concern here would be whether such a patient does not have 'asymptomatic sarcoidosis' but has CVID (often associated with multifocal non-caseating granulomas) with an associated B-cell lymphoma (for which such patients have a 30-fold Relative Risk) with developing mHLH (elevated sIL-2 being an as...
Would you offer re-irradiation LDRT for someone with osteoarthritis or tendinitis if symptoms recur?
I have not personally offered a patient a third round of LDRT and do not know of any data that shows efficacy. However, I might offer a third round if a particular patient got adequate results with the first two and there was some separation in time (perhaps >1 year) since the last round.
Do you counsel patients differently about the risk of radiation induced malignancy when you are treating a proximal joint (hip) vs a distal joint (elbow) for benign conditions such as OA?
The mentality for this must change from radiation oncologist thinking to radiation medicine thinking. There have been no documented cases of malignancy from LDRT treatment of OA. Those who worry about the spine reference old studies giving 20 Gy in 5 fx with an open field pre-linac era. This is not ...
How would you approach evaluation and management of a patient with chronic arthralgias and bilateral hand weakness who has a positive ANA (1:160) and low-titer anti-SSB positivity, in the setting of otherwise negative ENA panel, normal inflammatory markers, normal complement levels and immunoglobulins, and unrevealing EMG/NCS testing?
The low titer SSB/La antibody would only factor into the consideration of SjD if there were other suggestive features, like documented hypo salivation and/or high ocular staining score, neuropathy, etc. Would learn when they were totally well and what potential triggering events may have occurred. I...
Are the results of the SEAM-RA trial generalizable to other TNF inhibitors given the differences in immunogenicity?
This is a great question, and an important one because different TNF inhibitors have different immunogenicity and patients can make anti-drug antibodies that can effectively neutralize the drug and render it a less effective treatment option. This tends to happen more with some molecular constructs ...
Do you regularly recommend an immunological workup for patients with suspected immunodeficiency or defer to immunology?
I defer after a very preliminary work-up based on the type of immunodeficiency expected. I try to direct the consult to a provider most likely to have expertise in the problem I suspect. Often, I suggest consulting with a provider at NIH.
What is your preferred first-line treatment for chronic fatigue in patients with long COVID-19?
Assuming that a thorough workup for other causes of fatigue (anemia, thyroid dysfunction, sleep apnea, etc.) has been performed and is negative, no single medication has been proven by a randomized placebo-controlled trial to help chronic fatigue in PASC. Anecdotally, my colleagues who treat PASC ha...
How long would you recommend that a patient continues guselkumab prior to deciding that the therapy is not effective?
Many trials have a placebo-controlled period of 12-24 weeks. Thereafter, all patients receive active treatment. Even if the original treatment allocation remains unknown to the patient and doctor, they know that from that moment on, everyone receives active treatment. This will have an influence on ...