Rheumatology
Clinical discussions on autoimmune diseases, biologic therapies, vasculitis, and musculoskeletal conditions.
Recent Discussions
What strategies have you found most helpful to improve adherence to hydroxychloroquine among patients with lupus?
In my practice, three approaches have been most useful:-Make adherence measurable. I routinely check whole-blood hydroxychloroquine levels and review the trend with patients in a nonjudgmental way. This creates accountability and turns an otherwise “invisible” treatment into something concrete that ...
In light of promising results of hydroxychloroquine in COVID-19, should we consider using it prophylactically in cancer patients, especially if immunocompromised?
At this time, as there is no good evidence available, I would not recommend the use of hydroxycholoroquine prophylactically in cancer patients. It is unclear whether it would prevent contagion, probably not, and we still don't know if it will have any effect on the course of COVID-19. We expect ther...
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 ...
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 ...
Do you taper glucocorticoids less aggressively when symptoms improve but serologies remain active in a patient with non-renal SLE?
I would worry more about the decree of immune-mediated activity, but would still move forward with aggressive steroid taper. I would monitor for increase in disease activity, ie complements and inflammatory markers closely.
How do you counsel a patient with Sjogren's and extremely dry mouth who is losing their ability to taste food?
Agree with Dr. @Dr. First Last, and we cannot overemphasize the candidiasis part. Have a very low threshold for treating candidiasis while at the same time maximizing salivary stimulation (pilocarpine, cevimeline, bethanechol). When severe xerostomia occurs, as in the question, atypical presentation...
What recommendations do you provide patients regarding immunization or boosters prior to initiating rituximab?
To my knowledge, there is no unified recommendation, although the majority of us recommend all age-appropriate immunizations plus strong consideration of younger-than-standard-age immunization for diseases such as pneumococcus and VZV prior to initiation of rituximab when medically feasible. Timing ...
Do you recommend allopurinol desensitization in gout patients who develop a rash on allopurinol therapy?
I don't recommend desensitization for allopurinol-allergic patients. There was a time when this made sense due to the lack of a viable alternative therapy. The process is cumbersome in a private practice setting and not as simple as providing the patient with a prescription for febuxostat.Febuxostat...
Do you check mycophenolate levels in patients prescribed mycophenolate who present with a lupus nephritis flare?
In general, I tend to shoot for an induction dose (3 grams) if I am using Cellcept with steroids for a flare, unless I am doing multitarget therapy or there are side effects such as GI symptoms or cytopenias. In those cases, I lower the dose to 2 grams (1000 mg BID). If there is concern for unsatisf...
What is your approach to a patient with RF+/CCP+ rheumatoid arthritis that was previously on TNFi now with high-titer ANA and dsDNA (crithida 1:2560), +chromatin, +histone?
This scenario reads like TNF inhibitor drug-induced serological lupus. The first clinical issue is: are there accompanying symptoms or signs of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) beyond the underlying inflammatory arthritis, which would be better attributed to the seropositive rheumatoid arthritis (...