Rheumatology
Clinical discussions on autoimmune diseases, biologic therapies, vasculitis, and musculoskeletal conditions.
Recent Discussions
Is there a period of time after which you would not resume ICI after a patient has had an irAE and required a prolonged steroid taper?
Typically if a patient has required treatment with steroids for four to six months, it was because their irAE was significant (grade 2-4) and refractory to initial treatment. If the patient received combination immunotherapy, such as anti-CTLA-4 and anti-PD-1 agents, one could consider resuming the ...
Before re-challenging a patient with ICI after grade 1-2 pneumonitis, do you re-image to confirm resolution of pneumonitis?
Grade 1 pneumonitis is defined as confined to one lobe of the lung or <25% of the total lung parenchyma, while grade 2 pneumonitis is defined as involving more than one lobe of the lung or 25-50% of the lung parenchyma. Grade 1 pneumonitis is typically an incidental finding on CT in an asymptomatic ...
How would you approach diagnosis of a patient with recurrent episodes of abdominal pain, severe myalgias, low grade fevers and urticaria?
Without the mEFV variant, from a rheumatologist viewpoint, the differential includes IBD, a periodic fever syndrome such as FMF or FCAS, and MCAS. Therefore, I would consider that workup with genetic testing (anyone can send!), fecal calprotectin, and MCAS eval with A/I. I don't think of urticarial ...
How do you interpret treatment response in the DISCOVER-2 Trial when patients were allowed to remain on up to 10mg of prednisone equivalent for disease control while on guselkumab?
The dependence on the use of systemic glucocorticoids may indeed be a good reason to change treatment. Especially in patients with psoriatic arthritis. So, if patients are unable to stop systemic glucocorticoids and there are still treatment options for the patient, this could be tried. It is diffic...
What biomarkers or patient characteristics do you feel best predict response to B cell depleting therapies in a patient with Sjogren's?
At present, it may depend on the Sjogren's phenotype being treated with B-cell depleting therapies. If it is vasculitis with or without cryo, cryoglobulins, rheumatoid factor, and complements are helpful, along with inflammatory markers (ESR/CRP). I also note the level of total IgG, if elevated, may...
Are there particular subsets of AAV patients in which avacopan is more effective?
The following answer was jointly drafted by Dr. Peter Merkel and Dr. David Jayne:Patients in the ADVOCATE trial were stratified at entry according to time of diagnosis (new/relapsing), diagnosis (GPA/MPA), ANCA serotype (PR3/MPO), and background immunosuppressive (cyclophosphamide/rituximab) with re...
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 ...
Do you have safety concerns when prescribing GLP-1 medications in patients on corticosteroids or immunosuppressive therapy?
I think we need to be particularly careful when co-prescribing with systemic corticosteroids because of the risk of sarcopenia. We know that rapid weight loss is accompanied not only by a loss of fat tissue but also of muscle. Corticosteroids can also have myotoxicity and cause muscle atrophy. I the...
How do you approach patients who identify so strongly with being sick or with a particular diagnostic label that it makes up a significant portion of their identity?
In many cases, the point at which this question is being asked is one at which the train has already left the station, and sickness as a way of life/career has set in. Unfortunately, with functional somatic syndromes, there is data suggesting that self-rated quality of life and functioning are lower...
Has the MAJESTY trial changed your approach to the rituximab versus obinutuzumab choice in a patient with newly diagnosed primary membranous nephropathy and nephrotic syndrome?
The Bottom Line: Recent landmark trials—MENTOR and MAJESTY—confirm that anti-CD20 therapies are superior to calcineurin inhibitors (CNIs) for the treatment of MN.Key Trial DataMENTOR: Demonstrated that RTX was noninferior to cyclosporine at 12 months, and decisively superior by 24 months (60% vs. 20...