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Rheumatology

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

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How long would you recommend that a patient continues guselkumab prior to deciding that the therapy is not effective?

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Rheumatology · Leiden University Medical Center

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 offer adjuvant radiation therapy for a breast cancer patient with dermatomyositis?

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2 Answers

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Rheumatology · Emory University

This is an exceptionally important question for clinicians. I'm a little biased as I run an autoimmune Myositis Clinic, but here are my two cents: Paraneoplastic dermatomyositis (DM) is a fairly common occurrence (roughly about 15% of all DM cases, but up to 30-40% in some subtypes, such as adult pa...

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?

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Rheumatology · University of Washington in Seattle

If patients were on less than or equal to prednisone 10 mg, they could continue that in the background during the trial, but note that only 20% of patients were on prednisone, a much lower figure than a typical rheumatoid arthritis trial, which is consistent with the point that rheumatologists shy a...

In the treatment of lupus nephritis, which patients may benefit from the use of rituximab or other B-cell depleting agents during induction?

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Rheumatology · Hackensack University Medical Center

I agree with @Dr. @Dr. First Last's previous answer (posted July 2020). In addition, the 2024 ACR Lupus Nephritis guidelines (discussed at the 2024 ACR meeting) still recommend mycophenolate (MMF) or cyclophosphamide as first-line induction therapies for lupus nephritis (LN), rather than B-cell depl...

In patients with osteoporosis at high fracture risk, what factors most influence your decision to prescribe teriparatide versus abaloparatide?

3 Answers

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Rheumatology · Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

Both abaloparatide and teriparatide are very effective anabolic agents to reduce vertebral and nonvertebral fracture risk in patients with osteoporosis (although clinical trials did not demonstrate reduction of hip fracture risk). The two agents are more similar than different and both induce an an...

Would you consider combining voclosporin and obinutuzumab for pure Class V lupus nephritis?

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4 Answers

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Rheumatology · Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences (USUHS)

I agree with @Andras Perl. Changing his regimen is indicated since target proteinuria (<700 mg/day by 1 year) has not been achieved, and renal biopsy shows ongoing active inflammatory class V (very smart to get that biopsy, by the way!).Obinituzumab (OBI) is the better choice than belimumab in patie...

How would you approach rituximab dosing in a patient with SLE-Myositis overlap with LN Class III, now with worsening UPCR and concern for worsening ILD 4 months post induction and incomplete B-Cell depletion on recent labs?

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Rheumatology · The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth)

This is a challenging and concerning situation, as the patient is declining after rituximab. Without knowing which other medications have been tried, I would prioritize medications targeting life-threatening manifestations, i.e., the LN and ILD. In that case, I would start treatment with steroids, m...

What is your approach to use of IL-17 inhibitors in patients with axial spondyloarthritis and a family history of inflammatory bowel disease?

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Rheumatology · OHSU

I would have no hesitation in using an IL-17i in an axSpA patient with a family history of IBD as long as the patient themselves do not have active IBD. Clinical trials on Secukinumab, Ixekizumab, and Bimekizumab did not exclude patients with a history of IBD, and family H/O IBD was not recorded. Ac...

What would be your treatment approach for a patient with concomitant diagnoses of multiple myeloma and axial spondyloarthritis?

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Rheumatology · OHSU

The treatment of multiple myeloma would take precedence in this situation. I would get in touch with the oncologist, ask them about their treatment plans, explain to them how we treat axSpA (NSAIDs, csDMARDs for peripheral manifestations, and biologics, small molecules for axial disease), and then c...

What factors lead you to recommend a JAK inhibitor as second-line therapy in a patient with radiographic axSpA who has had a primary non-response to a TNF inhibitor, before trying an IL-17 inhibitor?

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Rheumatology · Stanford University

This is an excellent question, which requires not just a treatment plan but also a revelation of how we should be making patient management decisions in Spondyloarthritis (SpA). My initial reaction is that primary non-response to a TNFi is not the usual story; if this truly happens, I recommend re-e...