Mednet Logo
HomeRheumatology
Rheumatology

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?

2 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Medical Oncology · Albert Einstein College of Medicine at Montefiore Medical Center

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...

How will you approach tapering of therapy in a patient with PsA who has responded well to tirzepatide and ixekizumab and has maintained disease remission for several years?

2 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Rheumatology · University of Rochester

This is a difficult question to answer based on current data. While tapering is a standard strategy for DMARD therapies in many rheumatic diseases, many studies show that successful tapering or therapy discontinuation is not possible for most patients. If we are evaluating ixekizumab alone, few pati...

Based on Together-PsA, would you favor starting all patients with PsA and comorbid obesity on combination therapy with tirzepatide + bDMARD or will you pursue initial bDMARD monotherapy with tirzepatide rescue in the event of bDMARD non-response?

3 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Rheumatology · University of Rochester

In looking at the Together-PsA data, this was a challenging cohort to treat, and a reasonable increase in treatment response was seen with combination therapy. Multiple studies have shown that obese psoriatic arthritis (PsA) patients are less likely to achieve minimal disease activity (MDA) and have...

Is there a role for nitazoxanide for treatment of norovirus gastroenteritis in immunocompromised patients?

1
2 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Infectious Disease · National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)

There is no good-quality evidence supporting a role for nitazoxanide for treatment of norovirus gastroenteritis in immunocompromised patients. The efficacy of nitazoxanide in viral gastroenteritis is supported by a small manufacturer-sponsored randomized, double-blind trial in non-immunocompromised ...

What is the role of the rheumatologist in recommending and providing GLP-1 medications to their patients given the benefits across many disease domains including osteoarthritis?

3
5 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Rheumatology · NYU Langone Health

Obesity has long been discussed in the literature as the most modifiable risk factor for knee osteoarthritis pain and progression, with a reduction in knee OA attributed to the decrease in mechanical load. But for the last decade, there has been much attention placed on the impact of metabolic facto...

How do you approach the management of a symptomatic Baker's cyst?

1 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Rheumatology · Mobile Medical Care Inc

I have offered NSAIDs, PT, and ultrasound-guided aspiration and injection for management of a symptomatic Baker’s cyst in a patient with OA or mechanical pathology. I favor aspiration and injection of the knee joint as well as the cyst, though the literature does not necessitate injection of the joi...

Should special precautions be taken patients with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome receiving radiation therapy?

2
6 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Radiation Oncology · Oncology Las Vegas

Not all EDS is the same. Most commonly, an EDS patient these days is a clinically diagnosed patient with hypermobile joints, possibly stretchy skin, and possibly chronic pain syndrome. That is a very different picture from vascular EDS with a COL3A1 mutation, which is rare and would have the extreme...

If a patient who has tolerated allopurinol for a prolonged period of time is subsequently found to be positive for the HLA-B*58:01 gene, how would you manage urate-lowering therapy thereafter?

2
2 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Rheumatology · National institues of Health

There is a strong association between the presence of the HLA-B*58:01 allele and allopurinol-related severe cutaneous adverse reactions (SCAR* - Stevens-Johnson Syndrome, Toxic Epidermal Necrolysis or Severe Hypersensitivity Syndrome). This association was demonstrated in a Taiwanese study by Hung e...

Do you have safety concerns when prescribing GLP-1 medications in patients on corticosteroids or immunosuppressive therapy?

4 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Rheumatology · Sorbonne Université

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...

Are there particular subsets of AAV patients in which avacopan is more effective?

1 Answers

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Rheumatology · Director, Vasculitis Clinical Research Consortium

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...