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Rheumatology

Rheumatology

Clinical discussions on autoimmune diseases, biologic therapies, vasculitis, and musculoskeletal conditions.

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In patients with a history of retinal vein occlusion, how should the risk of recurrent thromboembolic events influence the selection of osteoporosis therapies?

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Endocrinology · William Jennings Bryan Dorn Department Of Veterans Affairs Medical Center

The FDA-approved prescribing information for raloxifene explicitly lists retinal vein thrombosis alongside deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism as contraindications.

For a patient with suspected post-streptococcal reactive arthritis who does not meet criteria for acute rheumatic fever and has a normal echocardiogram at presentation, do you prescribe 1 year of antibiotic prophylaxis?

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Rheumatology · University of Alabama Birmingham

This is a loaded question. Post-Streptococcal reactive arthritis (PSRA) plagued me during my fellowship (many moons ago). There is a fine line between PSRA and rheumatic fever (RF). We rarely see RF in the United States anymore. If I'm convinced it is PSRA and not RF (e.g., RF migratory arthritis qu...

Would you consider combination mycophenolate and JAKi in a patient with RA-ILD?

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Rheumatology · University of Washington

I have minimal experience combining a JAKi with mycophenolate. A patient with RA-ILD whose joints were well controlled with tofacitinib but whose ILD was progressing had MMF added to their regimen by their ILD pulmonologist. Unfortunately, after 4 months, the patient developed significant leukopenia...

What is in the differential diagnoses for isolated bilateral tarsometatarsal joint erosions in the absence of other clinical or serologic evidence of systemic inflammatory arthritis?

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Rheumatology · Stanford University

Post-traumatic injury is the most common cause, especially mid-foot sprains and fractures, although not usually bilateral unless there is a predisposition such as high arches and osteoarthritis (OA) that can occur due to mechanical stress. Erosive OA can cause these findings, although more commonly ...

Is it still significant to denote the etiology of ILD in a patient with PPF?

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Pulmonology · UC San Diego Health

Yes, absolutely! Infact, the most effective treatment in patients without IPF (PPF) is treatment of the cause. So if there is underlying autoimmune disease or exposure, primary treatment should be directed against that trigger and this has potential to stop progression and even improve lung function...

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?

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Medical Oncology · Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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 ...

In a patient with gout previously treated with pegloticase who then discontinued therapy, can pegloticase be safely and effectively restarted?

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Rheumatology · Virginia Commonwealth University Health System

It depends on the reason for discontinuation of Pegloticase therapy in the first place, since efficacy and safety data varies with it.Pegloticase can be safely and effectively restarted if the initial discontinuation was not due to a loss of efficacy or a severe infusion reaction, and should be done...

How would you apprach a SLE patient who is planning pregnancy on hydroxychloroquine with a high titer dsDNA who cannot tolerate azathioprine and whose only symptom is arthralgia?

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Rheumatology · UT Southwestern Medical Center

In an SLE patient planning pregnancy whose only clinical manifestation is arthralgia, hydroxychloroquine monotherapy is appropriate. During the pregnant and non-pregnant state, additional immunosuppression is not indicated for a high titer dsDNA; rather, monitoring for organ manifestations is approp...

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?

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Rheumatology · University of California, Berkeley and San Francisco

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...

Do you routinely check morning cortisol before discharging a patient who received more than 3 days of high-dose corticosteroids during a hospitalization for an acute illness?

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Endocrinology · Johns Hopkins Endocrinology and Pituitary Center

No. In general, persistent HPA suppression does not occur when a single steroid treatment is shorter than 2 weeks.