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What’s new in the new jaundice guidelines?
More than 15 years in the making, the revised AAP Clinical Practice Guideline Revision: Management of Hyperbilirubinemia in the Newborn Infant 35 or More Weeks of Gestation was released in 2022. A key driving force for this revision was the expanded evidence base regarding monitoring and treatment of newborns 35 or more weeks’ gestation to prevent bilirubin encephalopathy and kernicterus.
Here, we summarize the highlights of the new guidelines and point out practical ways to incorporate these guidelines into daily practice.
What has changed?
If you are familiar with the previous guidelines (2004 or the 2009 update) for the management of newborn jaundice, you’ll note that the treatment graphs for phototherapy and exchange transfusion have been updated with new, slightly higher thresholds.
Bilirubin thresholds for starting phototherapy are about 2 mg/dL higher overall than indicated in previous iterations of the guidelines.
This change reflects new evidence that infants don’t typically develop bilirubin neurotoxicity until the total serum bilirubin (TSB) reaches levels well above the previous exchange transfusion threshold, justifying a narrow increase in the bilirubin level for starting phototherapy. Also, phototherapy treatment thresholds are now risk-adjusted, with separate curves for each gestational age from 35 weeks to > 38 weeks.
To find the applicable phototherapy threshold, use the infant’s gestational age (rounding down) and determine whether the infant has even a single neurotoxicity risk factor other than prematurity. Neurotoxicity risk factors include a low albumin level, isoimmune hemolytic disease, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency, or other hemolytic conditions; sepsis; or any significant clinical instability in the previous 24 hours.
For example, a 384/7 weeks’ gestation newborn has a TSB of 12 mg/dL at 48 hours of age but no neurotoxicity risk factors. Using the graph Phototherapy Thresholds: No Hyperbilirubinemia Neurotoxicity Risk Factors, should the infant be placed under phototherapy at this time? (Answer: No. The threshold for starting phototherapy on this infant is approximately 16 mg/dL.)
When hyperbilirubinemia becomes a medical emergency
A new term, “escalation of care,” has been adopted to describe actions to take when the newborn’s TSB climbs to within 2 mg/dL of the exchange transfusion threshold – a medical emergency. Instructions on how to ensure intensive phototherapy, and when to initiate an urgent exchange transfusion, are given, including the critical need to maintain intensive phototherapy continuously during infant transport and admission to another facility.
Transcutaneous vs. serum bilirubin
Either a serum TSB or a transcutaneous bilirubin (TcB) should be measured in all infants between 24 and 48 hours after birth or before discharge if that occurs earlier. TcB measurements are valid and reliable when used as a screening test to identify infants who require a TSB measurement. Although the two tests are generally correlated, they are not identical, and treatment decisions should be based on TSB levels. A TSB should be obtained if the TcB exceeds or is within 3 mg/dL of the phototherapy treatment threshold, or if the TcB is ≥ 15 mg/dL.
Following up: When to check another bilirubin level
Prior to these new guidelines, the question of when to get the next bilirubin level was based on Vinod Bhutani, MD’s risk nomogram, which classified newborn bilirubin levels within high-, intermediate-, or low-risk zones for needing phototherapy. A bilirubin level in the high-risk zone indicated the need for earlier follow-up. These risk zones have been replaced with a more specific table that provides recommended postdischarge follow-up based on how close the newborn’s bilirubin level is to the hour-specific threshold for treatment. The closer the latest TSB or TcB level is to the newborn’s risk-based phototherapy threshold, the sooner the follow-up to check another bilirubin level will need to be.
Most infants discharged before 72 hours of age will need follow-up within 2 days. Newborns with TSB levels nearing the level for phototherapy (within 2 mg/dL or less) should remain in the hospital.
Five tips for using the new guidelines
Bilitool.org, a popular and useful app, has already been updated to reflect the changes in the new guidelines, making it easy to apply the new thresholds and create a follow-up plan for each patient.
The guidelines provide recommendations for when to check rebound bilirubin levels after stopping phototherapy (hint: babies with neurotoxic risk factors). A TcB device should not be used while the infant is being treated with phototherapy. However, a TcB can be measured once the baby has been off phototherapy for at least 24 hours.
If you have at least two bilirubin measurements, you can calculate the “rate of rise” in bilirubin level. A rapid rate of rise, which serves as a clinical indicator of hemolysis, is defined as ≥ 0.3 mg/dL per hour in the first 24 hours or ≥ 0.2 mg/dL per hour after the first 24 hours of life. This is especially helpful when hemolysis is suspected even if the newborn’s direct antibody test (DAT) is negative. In this scenario, the infant is considered to have a neurotoxic risk factor.
When you initiate phototherapy, be aware of the infant’s bilirubin level threshold for stopping phototherapy (2 mg/dL below the starting phototherapy threshold), as well as the threshold for escalation of care (2 mg/dL below the exchange transfusion threshold).
Because the thresholds for starting phototherapy and initiating exchange transfusion are slightly higher and specific to gestational age, clinicians can more confidently use less phototherapy.
Other guideline highlights
The neurotoxic risk factors and corresponding thresholds are important. If the newborn has one or more neurotoxic risk factors other than prematurity, the neurotoxic risk threshold graph should be used when assessing the need for treatment. Neurotoxic risk thresholds should also be used for newborns whose bilirubin levels continue rising on phototherapy.
The guidelines emphasize that G6PD is one of the most important causes of hazardous hyperbilirubinemia leading to kernicterus in the United States and worldwide. Overall, 13% of African American males and about 4% of African American females have G6PD deficiency.
Finally, the guidelines remind clinicians that an important way to reduce the chances that phototherapy will be needed is to encourage early and frequent feeding (8-12 times in 24 hours).
The AAP Clinical Practice Guideline Revision: Management of Hyperbilirubinemia in the Newborn Infant 35 or More Weeks of Gestation contains a great deal more information, but these basic principles should allow practitioners to begin to incorporate these guidelines into daily practice.
Dr. Amaya is associate professor, department of pediatrics, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, and medical director, level 1 nursery, department of pediatrics, MUSC general academic pediatrics. She disclosed ties with Medical University of South Carolina. Dr. Balog is clinical associate professor of pediatrics, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston. She has no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Basco is professor, department of pediatrics, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston; director, division of general pediatrics, department of pediatrics, MUSC Children’s Hospital. He has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
More than 15 years in the making, the revised AAP Clinical Practice Guideline Revision: Management of Hyperbilirubinemia in the Newborn Infant 35 or More Weeks of Gestation was released in 2022. A key driving force for this revision was the expanded evidence base regarding monitoring and treatment of newborns 35 or more weeks’ gestation to prevent bilirubin encephalopathy and kernicterus.
Here, we summarize the highlights of the new guidelines and point out practical ways to incorporate these guidelines into daily practice.
What has changed?
If you are familiar with the previous guidelines (2004 or the 2009 update) for the management of newborn jaundice, you’ll note that the treatment graphs for phototherapy and exchange transfusion have been updated with new, slightly higher thresholds.
Bilirubin thresholds for starting phototherapy are about 2 mg/dL higher overall than indicated in previous iterations of the guidelines.
This change reflects new evidence that infants don’t typically develop bilirubin neurotoxicity until the total serum bilirubin (TSB) reaches levels well above the previous exchange transfusion threshold, justifying a narrow increase in the bilirubin level for starting phototherapy. Also, phototherapy treatment thresholds are now risk-adjusted, with separate curves for each gestational age from 35 weeks to > 38 weeks.
To find the applicable phototherapy threshold, use the infant’s gestational age (rounding down) and determine whether the infant has even a single neurotoxicity risk factor other than prematurity. Neurotoxicity risk factors include a low albumin level, isoimmune hemolytic disease, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency, or other hemolytic conditions; sepsis; or any significant clinical instability in the previous 24 hours.
For example, a 384/7 weeks’ gestation newborn has a TSB of 12 mg/dL at 48 hours of age but no neurotoxicity risk factors. Using the graph Phototherapy Thresholds: No Hyperbilirubinemia Neurotoxicity Risk Factors, should the infant be placed under phototherapy at this time? (Answer: No. The threshold for starting phototherapy on this infant is approximately 16 mg/dL.)
When hyperbilirubinemia becomes a medical emergency
A new term, “escalation of care,” has been adopted to describe actions to take when the newborn’s TSB climbs to within 2 mg/dL of the exchange transfusion threshold – a medical emergency. Instructions on how to ensure intensive phototherapy, and when to initiate an urgent exchange transfusion, are given, including the critical need to maintain intensive phototherapy continuously during infant transport and admission to another facility.
Transcutaneous vs. serum bilirubin
Either a serum TSB or a transcutaneous bilirubin (TcB) should be measured in all infants between 24 and 48 hours after birth or before discharge if that occurs earlier. TcB measurements are valid and reliable when used as a screening test to identify infants who require a TSB measurement. Although the two tests are generally correlated, they are not identical, and treatment decisions should be based on TSB levels. A TSB should be obtained if the TcB exceeds or is within 3 mg/dL of the phototherapy treatment threshold, or if the TcB is ≥ 15 mg/dL.
Following up: When to check another bilirubin level
Prior to these new guidelines, the question of when to get the next bilirubin level was based on Vinod Bhutani, MD’s risk nomogram, which classified newborn bilirubin levels within high-, intermediate-, or low-risk zones for needing phototherapy. A bilirubin level in the high-risk zone indicated the need for earlier follow-up. These risk zones have been replaced with a more specific table that provides recommended postdischarge follow-up based on how close the newborn’s bilirubin level is to the hour-specific threshold for treatment. The closer the latest TSB or TcB level is to the newborn’s risk-based phototherapy threshold, the sooner the follow-up to check another bilirubin level will need to be.
Most infants discharged before 72 hours of age will need follow-up within 2 days. Newborns with TSB levels nearing the level for phototherapy (within 2 mg/dL or less) should remain in the hospital.
Five tips for using the new guidelines
Bilitool.org, a popular and useful app, has already been updated to reflect the changes in the new guidelines, making it easy to apply the new thresholds and create a follow-up plan for each patient.
The guidelines provide recommendations for when to check rebound bilirubin levels after stopping phototherapy (hint: babies with neurotoxic risk factors). A TcB device should not be used while the infant is being treated with phototherapy. However, a TcB can be measured once the baby has been off phototherapy for at least 24 hours.
If you have at least two bilirubin measurements, you can calculate the “rate of rise” in bilirubin level. A rapid rate of rise, which serves as a clinical indicator of hemolysis, is defined as ≥ 0.3 mg/dL per hour in the first 24 hours or ≥ 0.2 mg/dL per hour after the first 24 hours of life. This is especially helpful when hemolysis is suspected even if the newborn’s direct antibody test (DAT) is negative. In this scenario, the infant is considered to have a neurotoxic risk factor.
When you initiate phototherapy, be aware of the infant’s bilirubin level threshold for stopping phototherapy (2 mg/dL below the starting phototherapy threshold), as well as the threshold for escalation of care (2 mg/dL below the exchange transfusion threshold).
Because the thresholds for starting phototherapy and initiating exchange transfusion are slightly higher and specific to gestational age, clinicians can more confidently use less phototherapy.
Other guideline highlights
The neurotoxic risk factors and corresponding thresholds are important. If the newborn has one or more neurotoxic risk factors other than prematurity, the neurotoxic risk threshold graph should be used when assessing the need for treatment. Neurotoxic risk thresholds should also be used for newborns whose bilirubin levels continue rising on phototherapy.
The guidelines emphasize that G6PD is one of the most important causes of hazardous hyperbilirubinemia leading to kernicterus in the United States and worldwide. Overall, 13% of African American males and about 4% of African American females have G6PD deficiency.
Finally, the guidelines remind clinicians that an important way to reduce the chances that phototherapy will be needed is to encourage early and frequent feeding (8-12 times in 24 hours).
The AAP Clinical Practice Guideline Revision: Management of Hyperbilirubinemia in the Newborn Infant 35 or More Weeks of Gestation contains a great deal more information, but these basic principles should allow practitioners to begin to incorporate these guidelines into daily practice.
Dr. Amaya is associate professor, department of pediatrics, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, and medical director, level 1 nursery, department of pediatrics, MUSC general academic pediatrics. She disclosed ties with Medical University of South Carolina. Dr. Balog is clinical associate professor of pediatrics, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston. She has no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Basco is professor, department of pediatrics, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston; director, division of general pediatrics, department of pediatrics, MUSC Children’s Hospital. He has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
More than 15 years in the making, the revised AAP Clinical Practice Guideline Revision: Management of Hyperbilirubinemia in the Newborn Infant 35 or More Weeks of Gestation was released in 2022. A key driving force for this revision was the expanded evidence base regarding monitoring and treatment of newborns 35 or more weeks’ gestation to prevent bilirubin encephalopathy and kernicterus.
Here, we summarize the highlights of the new guidelines and point out practical ways to incorporate these guidelines into daily practice.
What has changed?
If you are familiar with the previous guidelines (2004 or the 2009 update) for the management of newborn jaundice, you’ll note that the treatment graphs for phototherapy and exchange transfusion have been updated with new, slightly higher thresholds.
Bilirubin thresholds for starting phototherapy are about 2 mg/dL higher overall than indicated in previous iterations of the guidelines.
This change reflects new evidence that infants don’t typically develop bilirubin neurotoxicity until the total serum bilirubin (TSB) reaches levels well above the previous exchange transfusion threshold, justifying a narrow increase in the bilirubin level for starting phototherapy. Also, phototherapy treatment thresholds are now risk-adjusted, with separate curves for each gestational age from 35 weeks to > 38 weeks.
To find the applicable phototherapy threshold, use the infant’s gestational age (rounding down) and determine whether the infant has even a single neurotoxicity risk factor other than prematurity. Neurotoxicity risk factors include a low albumin level, isoimmune hemolytic disease, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency, or other hemolytic conditions; sepsis; or any significant clinical instability in the previous 24 hours.
For example, a 384/7 weeks’ gestation newborn has a TSB of 12 mg/dL at 48 hours of age but no neurotoxicity risk factors. Using the graph Phototherapy Thresholds: No Hyperbilirubinemia Neurotoxicity Risk Factors, should the infant be placed under phototherapy at this time? (Answer: No. The threshold for starting phototherapy on this infant is approximately 16 mg/dL.)
When hyperbilirubinemia becomes a medical emergency
A new term, “escalation of care,” has been adopted to describe actions to take when the newborn’s TSB climbs to within 2 mg/dL of the exchange transfusion threshold – a medical emergency. Instructions on how to ensure intensive phototherapy, and when to initiate an urgent exchange transfusion, are given, including the critical need to maintain intensive phototherapy continuously during infant transport and admission to another facility.
Transcutaneous vs. serum bilirubin
Either a serum TSB or a transcutaneous bilirubin (TcB) should be measured in all infants between 24 and 48 hours after birth or before discharge if that occurs earlier. TcB measurements are valid and reliable when used as a screening test to identify infants who require a TSB measurement. Although the two tests are generally correlated, they are not identical, and treatment decisions should be based on TSB levels. A TSB should be obtained if the TcB exceeds or is within 3 mg/dL of the phototherapy treatment threshold, or if the TcB is ≥ 15 mg/dL.
Following up: When to check another bilirubin level
Prior to these new guidelines, the question of when to get the next bilirubin level was based on Vinod Bhutani, MD’s risk nomogram, which classified newborn bilirubin levels within high-, intermediate-, or low-risk zones for needing phototherapy. A bilirubin level in the high-risk zone indicated the need for earlier follow-up. These risk zones have been replaced with a more specific table that provides recommended postdischarge follow-up based on how close the newborn’s bilirubin level is to the hour-specific threshold for treatment. The closer the latest TSB or TcB level is to the newborn’s risk-based phototherapy threshold, the sooner the follow-up to check another bilirubin level will need to be.
Most infants discharged before 72 hours of age will need follow-up within 2 days. Newborns with TSB levels nearing the level for phototherapy (within 2 mg/dL or less) should remain in the hospital.
Five tips for using the new guidelines
Bilitool.org, a popular and useful app, has already been updated to reflect the changes in the new guidelines, making it easy to apply the new thresholds and create a follow-up plan for each patient.
The guidelines provide recommendations for when to check rebound bilirubin levels after stopping phototherapy (hint: babies with neurotoxic risk factors). A TcB device should not be used while the infant is being treated with phototherapy. However, a TcB can be measured once the baby has been off phototherapy for at least 24 hours.
If you have at least two bilirubin measurements, you can calculate the “rate of rise” in bilirubin level. A rapid rate of rise, which serves as a clinical indicator of hemolysis, is defined as ≥ 0.3 mg/dL per hour in the first 24 hours or ≥ 0.2 mg/dL per hour after the first 24 hours of life. This is especially helpful when hemolysis is suspected even if the newborn’s direct antibody test (DAT) is negative. In this scenario, the infant is considered to have a neurotoxic risk factor.
When you initiate phototherapy, be aware of the infant’s bilirubin level threshold for stopping phototherapy (2 mg/dL below the starting phototherapy threshold), as well as the threshold for escalation of care (2 mg/dL below the exchange transfusion threshold).
Because the thresholds for starting phototherapy and initiating exchange transfusion are slightly higher and specific to gestational age, clinicians can more confidently use less phototherapy.
Other guideline highlights
The neurotoxic risk factors and corresponding thresholds are important. If the newborn has one or more neurotoxic risk factors other than prematurity, the neurotoxic risk threshold graph should be used when assessing the need for treatment. Neurotoxic risk thresholds should also be used for newborns whose bilirubin levels continue rising on phototherapy.
The guidelines emphasize that G6PD is one of the most important causes of hazardous hyperbilirubinemia leading to kernicterus in the United States and worldwide. Overall, 13% of African American males and about 4% of African American females have G6PD deficiency.
Finally, the guidelines remind clinicians that an important way to reduce the chances that phototherapy will be needed is to encourage early and frequent feeding (8-12 times in 24 hours).
The AAP Clinical Practice Guideline Revision: Management of Hyperbilirubinemia in the Newborn Infant 35 or More Weeks of Gestation contains a great deal more information, but these basic principles should allow practitioners to begin to incorporate these guidelines into daily practice.
Dr. Amaya is associate professor, department of pediatrics, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, and medical director, level 1 nursery, department of pediatrics, MUSC general academic pediatrics. She disclosed ties with Medical University of South Carolina. Dr. Balog is clinical associate professor of pediatrics, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston. She has no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Basco is professor, department of pediatrics, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston; director, division of general pediatrics, department of pediatrics, MUSC Children’s Hospital. He has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
AHA statement addresses equity in cardio-oncology care
A new scientific statement from the American Heart Association focuses on equity in cardio-oncology care and research.
A “growing body of evidence” suggests that women and people from underrepresented patient groups experience disproportionately higher cardiovascular effects from new and emerging anticancer therapies, the writing group, led by Daniel Addison, MD, with the Ohio State University, Columbus, pointed out.
For example, women appear to be at higher risk of immune checkpoint inhibitor–related toxicities, whereas Black patients with cancer face up to a threefold higher risk of cardiotoxicity with anticancer therapies.
With reduced screening and delayed preventive measures, Hispanic patients have more complex heart disease, cancer is diagnosed at later stages, and they receive more cardiotoxic regimens because of a lack of eligibility for novel treatments. Ultimately, this contributes to a higher incidence of treatment complications, cardiac dysfunction, and adverse patient outcomes for this patient group, they write.
Although no studies have specifically addressed cardio-oncology disparities in the LGBTQIA+ population, such disparities can be inferred from known cardiovascular disease and oncology disparities, the writing group noted.
These disparities are supported by “disparately high” risk of death after a cancer diagnosis among women and individuals from underrepresented groups, even after accounting for socioeconomic and behavioral patterns, they pointed out.
The scientific statement was published online in Circulation.
Evidence gaps and the path forward
“Despite advances in strategies to limit the risks of cardiovascular events among cancer survivors, relatively limited guidance is available to address the rapidly growing problem of disparate cardiotoxic risks among women and underrepresented patient populations,” the writing group said.
Decentralized and sporadic evaluations have led to a lack of consensus on the definitions, investigations, and potential optimal strategies to address disparate cardiotoxicity with contemporary cancer immunotherapy, as well as biologic and cytotoxic therapies, they noted.
They said caution is needed when interpreting clinical trial data about cardiotoxicity and in generalizing the results because people from diverse racial and ethnic groups have not been well represented in many trials.
The writing group outlined key evidence gaps and future research directions for addressing cardio-oncology disparities, as well as strategies to improve equity in cardio-oncology care and research.
These include the following:
- Identifying specific predictive factors of long-term cardiotoxic risk with targeted and immune-based cancer therapies in women and underrepresented populations.
- Investigating biological mechanisms that may underlie differences in cardiotoxicities between different patient groups.
- Developing personalized cardioprotection strategies that integrate biological, genetic, and social determinant markers.
- Intentionally diversifying clinical trials and identifying optimal strategies to improve representation in cancer clinical trials.
- Determining the role of technology, such as artificial intelligence, in improving cardiotoxicity disparities.
“Conscientiously leveraging technology and designing trials with outcomes related to these issues in practice (considering feasibility and cost) will critically accelerate the field of cardio-oncology in the 21st century. With tangible goals, we can improve health inequities in cardio-oncology,” the writing group said.
The research had no commercial funding. No conflicts of interest were reported.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
A new scientific statement from the American Heart Association focuses on equity in cardio-oncology care and research.
A “growing body of evidence” suggests that women and people from underrepresented patient groups experience disproportionately higher cardiovascular effects from new and emerging anticancer therapies, the writing group, led by Daniel Addison, MD, with the Ohio State University, Columbus, pointed out.
For example, women appear to be at higher risk of immune checkpoint inhibitor–related toxicities, whereas Black patients with cancer face up to a threefold higher risk of cardiotoxicity with anticancer therapies.
With reduced screening and delayed preventive measures, Hispanic patients have more complex heart disease, cancer is diagnosed at later stages, and they receive more cardiotoxic regimens because of a lack of eligibility for novel treatments. Ultimately, this contributes to a higher incidence of treatment complications, cardiac dysfunction, and adverse patient outcomes for this patient group, they write.
Although no studies have specifically addressed cardio-oncology disparities in the LGBTQIA+ population, such disparities can be inferred from known cardiovascular disease and oncology disparities, the writing group noted.
These disparities are supported by “disparately high” risk of death after a cancer diagnosis among women and individuals from underrepresented groups, even after accounting for socioeconomic and behavioral patterns, they pointed out.
The scientific statement was published online in Circulation.
Evidence gaps and the path forward
“Despite advances in strategies to limit the risks of cardiovascular events among cancer survivors, relatively limited guidance is available to address the rapidly growing problem of disparate cardiotoxic risks among women and underrepresented patient populations,” the writing group said.
Decentralized and sporadic evaluations have led to a lack of consensus on the definitions, investigations, and potential optimal strategies to address disparate cardiotoxicity with contemporary cancer immunotherapy, as well as biologic and cytotoxic therapies, they noted.
They said caution is needed when interpreting clinical trial data about cardiotoxicity and in generalizing the results because people from diverse racial and ethnic groups have not been well represented in many trials.
The writing group outlined key evidence gaps and future research directions for addressing cardio-oncology disparities, as well as strategies to improve equity in cardio-oncology care and research.
These include the following:
- Identifying specific predictive factors of long-term cardiotoxic risk with targeted and immune-based cancer therapies in women and underrepresented populations.
- Investigating biological mechanisms that may underlie differences in cardiotoxicities between different patient groups.
- Developing personalized cardioprotection strategies that integrate biological, genetic, and social determinant markers.
- Intentionally diversifying clinical trials and identifying optimal strategies to improve representation in cancer clinical trials.
- Determining the role of technology, such as artificial intelligence, in improving cardiotoxicity disparities.
“Conscientiously leveraging technology and designing trials with outcomes related to these issues in practice (considering feasibility and cost) will critically accelerate the field of cardio-oncology in the 21st century. With tangible goals, we can improve health inequities in cardio-oncology,” the writing group said.
The research had no commercial funding. No conflicts of interest were reported.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
A new scientific statement from the American Heart Association focuses on equity in cardio-oncology care and research.
A “growing body of evidence” suggests that women and people from underrepresented patient groups experience disproportionately higher cardiovascular effects from new and emerging anticancer therapies, the writing group, led by Daniel Addison, MD, with the Ohio State University, Columbus, pointed out.
For example, women appear to be at higher risk of immune checkpoint inhibitor–related toxicities, whereas Black patients with cancer face up to a threefold higher risk of cardiotoxicity with anticancer therapies.
With reduced screening and delayed preventive measures, Hispanic patients have more complex heart disease, cancer is diagnosed at later stages, and they receive more cardiotoxic regimens because of a lack of eligibility for novel treatments. Ultimately, this contributes to a higher incidence of treatment complications, cardiac dysfunction, and adverse patient outcomes for this patient group, they write.
Although no studies have specifically addressed cardio-oncology disparities in the LGBTQIA+ population, such disparities can be inferred from known cardiovascular disease and oncology disparities, the writing group noted.
These disparities are supported by “disparately high” risk of death after a cancer diagnosis among women and individuals from underrepresented groups, even after accounting for socioeconomic and behavioral patterns, they pointed out.
The scientific statement was published online in Circulation.
Evidence gaps and the path forward
“Despite advances in strategies to limit the risks of cardiovascular events among cancer survivors, relatively limited guidance is available to address the rapidly growing problem of disparate cardiotoxic risks among women and underrepresented patient populations,” the writing group said.
Decentralized and sporadic evaluations have led to a lack of consensus on the definitions, investigations, and potential optimal strategies to address disparate cardiotoxicity with contemporary cancer immunotherapy, as well as biologic and cytotoxic therapies, they noted.
They said caution is needed when interpreting clinical trial data about cardiotoxicity and in generalizing the results because people from diverse racial and ethnic groups have not been well represented in many trials.
The writing group outlined key evidence gaps and future research directions for addressing cardio-oncology disparities, as well as strategies to improve equity in cardio-oncology care and research.
These include the following:
- Identifying specific predictive factors of long-term cardiotoxic risk with targeted and immune-based cancer therapies in women and underrepresented populations.
- Investigating biological mechanisms that may underlie differences in cardiotoxicities between different patient groups.
- Developing personalized cardioprotection strategies that integrate biological, genetic, and social determinant markers.
- Intentionally diversifying clinical trials and identifying optimal strategies to improve representation in cancer clinical trials.
- Determining the role of technology, such as artificial intelligence, in improving cardiotoxicity disparities.
“Conscientiously leveraging technology and designing trials with outcomes related to these issues in practice (considering feasibility and cost) will critically accelerate the field of cardio-oncology in the 21st century. With tangible goals, we can improve health inequities in cardio-oncology,” the writing group said.
The research had no commercial funding. No conflicts of interest were reported.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM CIRCULATION
New international guidelines on opioid deprescribing
An expert panel of pain management clinicians has released what they say are the first international guidelines for general practitioners on opioid analgesic deprescribing in adults.
The recommendations describe best practices for stopping opioid therapy and emphasize slow tapering and individualized deprescribing plans tailored to each patient.
Developed by general practitioners, pain specialists, addiction specialists, pharmacists, registered nurses, consumers, and physiotherapists, the guidelines note that deprescribing may not be appropriate for every patient and that stopping abruptly can be associated with an increased risk of overdose.
“Internationally, we were seeing significant harms from opioids but also significant harms from unsolicited and abrupt opioid cessation,” said lead author Aili Langford, PhD, who conducted the study as a doctoral student at the University of Sydney. “It was clear that recommendations to support safe and person-centered opioid deprescribing were required.”
The findings were published online in the Medical Journal of Australia.
Deprescribing plan
The consensus guidelines include 11 recommendations for deprescribing in adult patients who take at least one opioid for any type of pain.
Recommendations include implementing a deprescribing plan when opioids are first prescribed and gradual and individualized deprescribing, with regular monitoring and review.
Clinicians should consider opioid deprescribing in patients who experience no clinically meaningful improvement in function, quality of life, or pain at high risk with opioid therapy, they note. Patients who are at high risk for opioid-related harm are also good candidates for deprescribing.
Stopping opioid therapy is not recommended for patients with severe opioid use disorder (OUD). In those patients, medication-assisted OUD treatment and other evidence-based interventions are recommended.
“Opioids can be effective in pain management,” co-author Carl Schneider, PhD, an associate professor of pharmacy at the University of Sydney, said in a press release. “However, over the longer term, the risk of harms may outweigh the benefits.”
A ‘global problem’
Commenting on the guidelines, Orman Trent Hall, DO, assistant professor of addiction medicine, department of psychiatry and behavioral health at the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, said they are similar to recommendations published by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in 2016 and 2022 but offer additional information that could be helpful.
“This new guideline provides more explicit advice about tapering and withdrawal management, which may be useful to practitioners. The opioid crisis is a global problem, and while individual countries may require local solutions, the new international guideline may offer a framework for approaching this issue,” he said.
The guideline’s emphasis on the potential risks of deprescribing in some patients is also key, Dr. Hall added. Patients who are tapering off opioid therapy may have worsening pain and loss of function that can affect their quality of life.
“Patients may also experience psychological harm and increased risk of opioid use disorder and death by suicide following opioid deprescribing,” Dr. Hall said. “Therefore, it is important for providers to carefully weigh the risks of prescribing and deprescribing and engage patients with person-centered communication and shared decision-making.”
The work was funded by grants from the University of Sydney and the National Health and Medical Research Council. Full disclosures are available in the original article. Dr. Hall has provided expert opinion to the health care consultancy firm Lumanity and Emergent BioSolutions regarding the overdose crisis.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
An expert panel of pain management clinicians has released what they say are the first international guidelines for general practitioners on opioid analgesic deprescribing in adults.
The recommendations describe best practices for stopping opioid therapy and emphasize slow tapering and individualized deprescribing plans tailored to each patient.
Developed by general practitioners, pain specialists, addiction specialists, pharmacists, registered nurses, consumers, and physiotherapists, the guidelines note that deprescribing may not be appropriate for every patient and that stopping abruptly can be associated with an increased risk of overdose.
“Internationally, we were seeing significant harms from opioids but also significant harms from unsolicited and abrupt opioid cessation,” said lead author Aili Langford, PhD, who conducted the study as a doctoral student at the University of Sydney. “It was clear that recommendations to support safe and person-centered opioid deprescribing were required.”
The findings were published online in the Medical Journal of Australia.
Deprescribing plan
The consensus guidelines include 11 recommendations for deprescribing in adult patients who take at least one opioid for any type of pain.
Recommendations include implementing a deprescribing plan when opioids are first prescribed and gradual and individualized deprescribing, with regular monitoring and review.
Clinicians should consider opioid deprescribing in patients who experience no clinically meaningful improvement in function, quality of life, or pain at high risk with opioid therapy, they note. Patients who are at high risk for opioid-related harm are also good candidates for deprescribing.
Stopping opioid therapy is not recommended for patients with severe opioid use disorder (OUD). In those patients, medication-assisted OUD treatment and other evidence-based interventions are recommended.
“Opioids can be effective in pain management,” co-author Carl Schneider, PhD, an associate professor of pharmacy at the University of Sydney, said in a press release. “However, over the longer term, the risk of harms may outweigh the benefits.”
A ‘global problem’
Commenting on the guidelines, Orman Trent Hall, DO, assistant professor of addiction medicine, department of psychiatry and behavioral health at the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, said they are similar to recommendations published by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in 2016 and 2022 but offer additional information that could be helpful.
“This new guideline provides more explicit advice about tapering and withdrawal management, which may be useful to practitioners. The opioid crisis is a global problem, and while individual countries may require local solutions, the new international guideline may offer a framework for approaching this issue,” he said.
The guideline’s emphasis on the potential risks of deprescribing in some patients is also key, Dr. Hall added. Patients who are tapering off opioid therapy may have worsening pain and loss of function that can affect their quality of life.
“Patients may also experience psychological harm and increased risk of opioid use disorder and death by suicide following opioid deprescribing,” Dr. Hall said. “Therefore, it is important for providers to carefully weigh the risks of prescribing and deprescribing and engage patients with person-centered communication and shared decision-making.”
The work was funded by grants from the University of Sydney and the National Health and Medical Research Council. Full disclosures are available in the original article. Dr. Hall has provided expert opinion to the health care consultancy firm Lumanity and Emergent BioSolutions regarding the overdose crisis.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
An expert panel of pain management clinicians has released what they say are the first international guidelines for general practitioners on opioid analgesic deprescribing in adults.
The recommendations describe best practices for stopping opioid therapy and emphasize slow tapering and individualized deprescribing plans tailored to each patient.
Developed by general practitioners, pain specialists, addiction specialists, pharmacists, registered nurses, consumers, and physiotherapists, the guidelines note that deprescribing may not be appropriate for every patient and that stopping abruptly can be associated with an increased risk of overdose.
“Internationally, we were seeing significant harms from opioids but also significant harms from unsolicited and abrupt opioid cessation,” said lead author Aili Langford, PhD, who conducted the study as a doctoral student at the University of Sydney. “It was clear that recommendations to support safe and person-centered opioid deprescribing were required.”
The findings were published online in the Medical Journal of Australia.
Deprescribing plan
The consensus guidelines include 11 recommendations for deprescribing in adult patients who take at least one opioid for any type of pain.
Recommendations include implementing a deprescribing plan when opioids are first prescribed and gradual and individualized deprescribing, with regular monitoring and review.
Clinicians should consider opioid deprescribing in patients who experience no clinically meaningful improvement in function, quality of life, or pain at high risk with opioid therapy, they note. Patients who are at high risk for opioid-related harm are also good candidates for deprescribing.
Stopping opioid therapy is not recommended for patients with severe opioid use disorder (OUD). In those patients, medication-assisted OUD treatment and other evidence-based interventions are recommended.
“Opioids can be effective in pain management,” co-author Carl Schneider, PhD, an associate professor of pharmacy at the University of Sydney, said in a press release. “However, over the longer term, the risk of harms may outweigh the benefits.”
A ‘global problem’
Commenting on the guidelines, Orman Trent Hall, DO, assistant professor of addiction medicine, department of psychiatry and behavioral health at the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, said they are similar to recommendations published by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in 2016 and 2022 but offer additional information that could be helpful.
“This new guideline provides more explicit advice about tapering and withdrawal management, which may be useful to practitioners. The opioid crisis is a global problem, and while individual countries may require local solutions, the new international guideline may offer a framework for approaching this issue,” he said.
The guideline’s emphasis on the potential risks of deprescribing in some patients is also key, Dr. Hall added. Patients who are tapering off opioid therapy may have worsening pain and loss of function that can affect their quality of life.
“Patients may also experience psychological harm and increased risk of opioid use disorder and death by suicide following opioid deprescribing,” Dr. Hall said. “Therefore, it is important for providers to carefully weigh the risks of prescribing and deprescribing and engage patients with person-centered communication and shared decision-making.”
The work was funded by grants from the University of Sydney and the National Health and Medical Research Council. Full disclosures are available in the original article. Dr. Hall has provided expert opinion to the health care consultancy firm Lumanity and Emergent BioSolutions regarding the overdose crisis.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
New AGA CPU focuses on gastric peroral endoscopic myotomy for gastroparesis
Authored by Mouen A. Khashab, MD, director of therapeutic endoscopy at Johns Hopkins Medicine, Baltimore; Andrew Y. Wang, MD, AGAF, chief of interventional endoscopy, University of Virginia, Charlottesville; and, Qiang Cai, MD, PhD, chief of gastroenterology, Ochsner LSU Health Shreveport (La.), the update covers patient selection, procedural considerations, adverse events (AEs), and other topics.
“G-POEM is being performed worldwide to treat patients with refractory gastroparesis,” the investigators wrote in Gastroenterology). “G-POEM is an overall safe procedure with high technical success rates, particularly when performed by an endoscopist experienced in third-space endoscopy. Even if the durable clinical success of G-POEM is in the 50% to 60% range, this represents a huge clinical benefit to patients with refractory gastroparesis, which is a disease associated with substantial morbidity, poor quality of life, and a paucity of safe and effective treatments.”
The authors listed treatment alternatives, noting how associated clinical data have fallen short.
“Although endoscopic pyloric balloon dilation, intrapyloric botulinum toxin injection, gastric electrical stimulation, and transpyloric stenting have been used in patients [with gastroparesis] who have not responded to medical therapy, published studies concerning these therapies have been inconsistent, shown no benefit, or lacked methodologic rigor,” they wrote.
Patient selection
G-POEM should be considered in patients with medically refractory gastroparesis due to diabetes, prior surgery, or idiopathic causes. Candidates should undergo endoscopy to confirm no mechanical obstruction, as well as a solid-phase gastric emptying scan to confirm delayed emptying, with ideal candidates showing at least 20% retention at 4 hours, as this threshold has been linked with better clinical outcomes.
G-POEM is most beneficial when moderate to severe symptoms are present, the investigators wrote, particularly vomiting and nausea. The Gastroparesis Cardinal Symptom Index (GCSI) can be used to determine severity, with a score greater than 2 indicating moderate to severe presentation.
Procedural considerations
The CPU offers detailed procedural considerations, including preparation and equipment, technical guidance, and postprocedural strategy.
“G-POEM should only be performed by interventional endoscopists with expertise or training in third-space endoscopy,” Dr. Khashab and colleagues wrote. “Although experience in endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) is not mandatory before performing G-POEM, it likely shortens the learning curve.”
Equipment minimums are also described, including “a high-definition gastroscope, with a waterjet, affixed with a clear distal cap” and “a modern electrosurgical generator capable of modulating power based on tissue resistance and circuit impedance.”
While G-POEM is typically performed via a greater-curvature approach, similar outcomes have been documented for a lesser-curvature approach, Dr. Khashab and colleagues wrote. This alternative technique may increase difficulty of pyloromyotomy, they added.
Postprocedural care may involve an overnight stay, according to the update, with an upper GI study on the subsequent day to ensure no contrast leakage, though this is not mandatory.
Adverse events
“G-POEM is generally safe when performed by trained and/or experienced endoscopists, and AEs are uncommon,” the investigators wrote. “However, serious AEs can occur and have been reported.”
Reported AEs include capnoperitoneum, inadvertent mucosotomy, thermal-mucosal injury, abdominal pain, bleeding, gastric ulceration, and dumping syndrome.
Insurance companies called to action
After reviewing emerging data, the authors suggested the time has come to consider G-POEM as a routine, evidence-based procedure that deserves appropriate reimbursement by financial stakeholders.
“Many insurers still consider G-POEM investigational and refuse to cover this procedure for patients with medically refractory gastroparesis,” they wrote. “As the safety and clinical effectiveness of G-POEM is now well supported, insurance companies and payors should cover G-POEM for patients with significant gastroparesis.”
The clinical practice update was commissioned and approved by the American Gastroenterological Association. The investigators disclosed relationships with Boston Scientific, Medtronic, and Olympus, among others.
Authored by Mouen A. Khashab, MD, director of therapeutic endoscopy at Johns Hopkins Medicine, Baltimore; Andrew Y. Wang, MD, AGAF, chief of interventional endoscopy, University of Virginia, Charlottesville; and, Qiang Cai, MD, PhD, chief of gastroenterology, Ochsner LSU Health Shreveport (La.), the update covers patient selection, procedural considerations, adverse events (AEs), and other topics.
“G-POEM is being performed worldwide to treat patients with refractory gastroparesis,” the investigators wrote in Gastroenterology). “G-POEM is an overall safe procedure with high technical success rates, particularly when performed by an endoscopist experienced in third-space endoscopy. Even if the durable clinical success of G-POEM is in the 50% to 60% range, this represents a huge clinical benefit to patients with refractory gastroparesis, which is a disease associated with substantial morbidity, poor quality of life, and a paucity of safe and effective treatments.”
The authors listed treatment alternatives, noting how associated clinical data have fallen short.
“Although endoscopic pyloric balloon dilation, intrapyloric botulinum toxin injection, gastric electrical stimulation, and transpyloric stenting have been used in patients [with gastroparesis] who have not responded to medical therapy, published studies concerning these therapies have been inconsistent, shown no benefit, or lacked methodologic rigor,” they wrote.
Patient selection
G-POEM should be considered in patients with medically refractory gastroparesis due to diabetes, prior surgery, or idiopathic causes. Candidates should undergo endoscopy to confirm no mechanical obstruction, as well as a solid-phase gastric emptying scan to confirm delayed emptying, with ideal candidates showing at least 20% retention at 4 hours, as this threshold has been linked with better clinical outcomes.
G-POEM is most beneficial when moderate to severe symptoms are present, the investigators wrote, particularly vomiting and nausea. The Gastroparesis Cardinal Symptom Index (GCSI) can be used to determine severity, with a score greater than 2 indicating moderate to severe presentation.
Procedural considerations
The CPU offers detailed procedural considerations, including preparation and equipment, technical guidance, and postprocedural strategy.
“G-POEM should only be performed by interventional endoscopists with expertise or training in third-space endoscopy,” Dr. Khashab and colleagues wrote. “Although experience in endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) is not mandatory before performing G-POEM, it likely shortens the learning curve.”
Equipment minimums are also described, including “a high-definition gastroscope, with a waterjet, affixed with a clear distal cap” and “a modern electrosurgical generator capable of modulating power based on tissue resistance and circuit impedance.”
While G-POEM is typically performed via a greater-curvature approach, similar outcomes have been documented for a lesser-curvature approach, Dr. Khashab and colleagues wrote. This alternative technique may increase difficulty of pyloromyotomy, they added.
Postprocedural care may involve an overnight stay, according to the update, with an upper GI study on the subsequent day to ensure no contrast leakage, though this is not mandatory.
Adverse events
“G-POEM is generally safe when performed by trained and/or experienced endoscopists, and AEs are uncommon,” the investigators wrote. “However, serious AEs can occur and have been reported.”
Reported AEs include capnoperitoneum, inadvertent mucosotomy, thermal-mucosal injury, abdominal pain, bleeding, gastric ulceration, and dumping syndrome.
Insurance companies called to action
After reviewing emerging data, the authors suggested the time has come to consider G-POEM as a routine, evidence-based procedure that deserves appropriate reimbursement by financial stakeholders.
“Many insurers still consider G-POEM investigational and refuse to cover this procedure for patients with medically refractory gastroparesis,” they wrote. “As the safety and clinical effectiveness of G-POEM is now well supported, insurance companies and payors should cover G-POEM for patients with significant gastroparesis.”
The clinical practice update was commissioned and approved by the American Gastroenterological Association. The investigators disclosed relationships with Boston Scientific, Medtronic, and Olympus, among others.
Authored by Mouen A. Khashab, MD, director of therapeutic endoscopy at Johns Hopkins Medicine, Baltimore; Andrew Y. Wang, MD, AGAF, chief of interventional endoscopy, University of Virginia, Charlottesville; and, Qiang Cai, MD, PhD, chief of gastroenterology, Ochsner LSU Health Shreveport (La.), the update covers patient selection, procedural considerations, adverse events (AEs), and other topics.
“G-POEM is being performed worldwide to treat patients with refractory gastroparesis,” the investigators wrote in Gastroenterology). “G-POEM is an overall safe procedure with high technical success rates, particularly when performed by an endoscopist experienced in third-space endoscopy. Even if the durable clinical success of G-POEM is in the 50% to 60% range, this represents a huge clinical benefit to patients with refractory gastroparesis, which is a disease associated with substantial morbidity, poor quality of life, and a paucity of safe and effective treatments.”
The authors listed treatment alternatives, noting how associated clinical data have fallen short.
“Although endoscopic pyloric balloon dilation, intrapyloric botulinum toxin injection, gastric electrical stimulation, and transpyloric stenting have been used in patients [with gastroparesis] who have not responded to medical therapy, published studies concerning these therapies have been inconsistent, shown no benefit, or lacked methodologic rigor,” they wrote.
Patient selection
G-POEM should be considered in patients with medically refractory gastroparesis due to diabetes, prior surgery, or idiopathic causes. Candidates should undergo endoscopy to confirm no mechanical obstruction, as well as a solid-phase gastric emptying scan to confirm delayed emptying, with ideal candidates showing at least 20% retention at 4 hours, as this threshold has been linked with better clinical outcomes.
G-POEM is most beneficial when moderate to severe symptoms are present, the investigators wrote, particularly vomiting and nausea. The Gastroparesis Cardinal Symptom Index (GCSI) can be used to determine severity, with a score greater than 2 indicating moderate to severe presentation.
Procedural considerations
The CPU offers detailed procedural considerations, including preparation and equipment, technical guidance, and postprocedural strategy.
“G-POEM should only be performed by interventional endoscopists with expertise or training in third-space endoscopy,” Dr. Khashab and colleagues wrote. “Although experience in endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) is not mandatory before performing G-POEM, it likely shortens the learning curve.”
Equipment minimums are also described, including “a high-definition gastroscope, with a waterjet, affixed with a clear distal cap” and “a modern electrosurgical generator capable of modulating power based on tissue resistance and circuit impedance.”
While G-POEM is typically performed via a greater-curvature approach, similar outcomes have been documented for a lesser-curvature approach, Dr. Khashab and colleagues wrote. This alternative technique may increase difficulty of pyloromyotomy, they added.
Postprocedural care may involve an overnight stay, according to the update, with an upper GI study on the subsequent day to ensure no contrast leakage, though this is not mandatory.
Adverse events
“G-POEM is generally safe when performed by trained and/or experienced endoscopists, and AEs are uncommon,” the investigators wrote. “However, serious AEs can occur and have been reported.”
Reported AEs include capnoperitoneum, inadvertent mucosotomy, thermal-mucosal injury, abdominal pain, bleeding, gastric ulceration, and dumping syndrome.
Insurance companies called to action
After reviewing emerging data, the authors suggested the time has come to consider G-POEM as a routine, evidence-based procedure that deserves appropriate reimbursement by financial stakeholders.
“Many insurers still consider G-POEM investigational and refuse to cover this procedure for patients with medically refractory gastroparesis,” they wrote. “As the safety and clinical effectiveness of G-POEM is now well supported, insurance companies and payors should cover G-POEM for patients with significant gastroparesis.”
The clinical practice update was commissioned and approved by the American Gastroenterological Association. The investigators disclosed relationships with Boston Scientific, Medtronic, and Olympus, among others.
FROM GASTROENTEROLOGY
Systemic JIA and AOSD are the same disease, EULAR says
Systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (sJIA) and adult-onset Still’s disease (AOSD) should be grouped into one disease, Still’s disease, according to new diagnosis and treatment recommendations presented at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology.
The recommendations, made in collaboration with EULAR and the Pediatric Rheumatology European Society, emphasized that the ultimate treatment target for Still’s disease should be drug-free remission in all patients and that macrophage activation syndrome (MAS) should be identified and treated as soon as possible.
The task force focused on MAS because despite effective, innovative therapies, “we continued to see MAS,” said presenter Bruno Fautrel, MD, Pitié-Salpêtrière University Hospital, Paris. “We have to be very concerned about this potential complication.”
Dr. Fautrel copresented the recommendations with Fabrizio De Benedetti, MD, PhD, head of the division of rheumatology, Bambino Gesù Hospital, Rome.
Diagnosis
Dr. Fautrel noted that the cutoff age of 16 that differentiates sJIA and AOSD is “arbitrary.” There are some differences in age: The frequency of the disease is higher in young children, but it plateaus in young adults. Children under 18 months old are also far more likely to develop MAS.
To diagnose and treat Still’s disease, the recommendations state that clinicians should consider four criteria:
- A fever spiking at or above 39° C (102.2° F) for at least 7 days.
- A transient rash, preferentially on the trunk, that coincides with fever spikes, rash is typically erythematous but other rashes, like urticaria, can be consistent with the diagnosis.
- Some musculoskeletal involvement is common, involving arthralgia/myalgia.
- High levels of inflammation identified by neutrophilic leukocytosis, increased serum C-reactive protein (CRP), and ferritin.
Dr. Fautrel noted that, while arthritis can be present, it is not necessary to make a diagnosis. In pediatrics, “arthritis is likely to happen after a few weeks of the evolution of the disease,” and waiting for arthritis to develop can lead to diagnostic delay, “which is a problem.”
For individuals with suspected Still’s disease, NSAIDs can be used as a “bridging therapy” before the diagnosis is confirmed.
Treatment
The recommendations emphasized that treatment and therapeutic strategy “should be based on shared decision-making between the parents/patients and the treating team,” with the ultimate goal of drug-free remission.
To achieve this goal, the document outlines time-based targets for clinically inactive disease (CID). At 4 weeks, patients should have no fever, reduction of active or swollen joint count by more than 50%, a normal CRP level, and a rating of less than 20 on a visual analog scale of 0-100. At 3 months, patients should maintain clinically inactive disease with a glucocorticoid dose of less than 0.1 or 0.2 mg/kg per day. At 6 months, CID should be maintained without glucocorticoids.
While the authors of the recommendations noted that glucocorticoids are efficacious, their long-term use should be avoided because of safety issues. An interleukin-1 or IL-6 inhibitor should be prioritized and initiated as soon as possible after diagnosis.
Patients should maintain CID between 3 and 6 months before tapering off biologics.
The recommendations are congruent with the 2021 American College of Rheumatology’s guidelines for sJIA, noted Karen Onel, MD, pediatric rheumatologist, Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, and the principle investigator for the ACR guidelines. One main difference is that the EULAR recommendations included time lines for treatment targets, while the ACR’s did not.
“It’s great to have these time lines in there,” she said in an interview, though there are still some unknowns. “We don’t actually know what the tapering frequency should be,” she said, “but these are definitely goals that we need to explore and see how they evolve.”
MAS and lung complications
The EULAR recommendations also touched on two concerning complications, particularly in children: MAS and lung disease. According to the document, MAS should be considered in patients with Still’s disease with these symptoms: fever, splenomegaly, elevated serum ferritin, low cell counts, abnormal liver function tests, elevated serum triglycerides, and intravascular activation of coagulation. The MAS 2016 criteria can also be used to facilitate diagnosis.
“MAS treatment must include high-dose glucocorticoids,” the document states. “In addition, treatments including anakinra, ciclosporin, and/or interferon-gamma inhibitors should be considered as a part of initial therapy.”
The recommendations also addressed the risk for lung disease, “which is an emerging issue, particularly in children, that the physician should be very well aware of,” Dr. De Benedetti said. This complication can arise at any time point of the disease, he added.
The document advised actively screening for lung disease by searching for clinical symptoms such as digital clubbing, persistent cough, and shortness of breath. Pulmonary function tests like pulse oximetry and diffusing capacity of the lungs for carbon monoxide may also be used, but these standard lung function tests are very difficult to do in children under 6 years old, Dr. De Benedetti noted. The recommendations advise performing high-resolution CT in “any patients with clinical concerns.”
“We have lowered the threshold for CT scan because of the emerging features of this lung disease that may actually be lethal and therefore require prompt attention,” Dr. De Benedetti noted.
The recommendations for lung disease are “broad,” as there is still much to learn about the risk for lung disease in a small portion of sJIA patients, Dr. Onel said.
“There’s a lot that we are trying to work out about this; exactly how to screen, who to screen, what to do, who to treat, and how to treat really remains unclear,” she said. “We absolutely agree that this is a major, major issue that we need to come to some sort of agreement upon, but we’re just not there yet.”
Dr. De Benedetti, Dr. Fautrel, and Dr. Onel disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (sJIA) and adult-onset Still’s disease (AOSD) should be grouped into one disease, Still’s disease, according to new diagnosis and treatment recommendations presented at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology.
The recommendations, made in collaboration with EULAR and the Pediatric Rheumatology European Society, emphasized that the ultimate treatment target for Still’s disease should be drug-free remission in all patients and that macrophage activation syndrome (MAS) should be identified and treated as soon as possible.
The task force focused on MAS because despite effective, innovative therapies, “we continued to see MAS,” said presenter Bruno Fautrel, MD, Pitié-Salpêtrière University Hospital, Paris. “We have to be very concerned about this potential complication.”
Dr. Fautrel copresented the recommendations with Fabrizio De Benedetti, MD, PhD, head of the division of rheumatology, Bambino Gesù Hospital, Rome.
Diagnosis
Dr. Fautrel noted that the cutoff age of 16 that differentiates sJIA and AOSD is “arbitrary.” There are some differences in age: The frequency of the disease is higher in young children, but it plateaus in young adults. Children under 18 months old are also far more likely to develop MAS.
To diagnose and treat Still’s disease, the recommendations state that clinicians should consider four criteria:
- A fever spiking at or above 39° C (102.2° F) for at least 7 days.
- A transient rash, preferentially on the trunk, that coincides with fever spikes, rash is typically erythematous but other rashes, like urticaria, can be consistent with the diagnosis.
- Some musculoskeletal involvement is common, involving arthralgia/myalgia.
- High levels of inflammation identified by neutrophilic leukocytosis, increased serum C-reactive protein (CRP), and ferritin.
Dr. Fautrel noted that, while arthritis can be present, it is not necessary to make a diagnosis. In pediatrics, “arthritis is likely to happen after a few weeks of the evolution of the disease,” and waiting for arthritis to develop can lead to diagnostic delay, “which is a problem.”
For individuals with suspected Still’s disease, NSAIDs can be used as a “bridging therapy” before the diagnosis is confirmed.
Treatment
The recommendations emphasized that treatment and therapeutic strategy “should be based on shared decision-making between the parents/patients and the treating team,” with the ultimate goal of drug-free remission.
To achieve this goal, the document outlines time-based targets for clinically inactive disease (CID). At 4 weeks, patients should have no fever, reduction of active or swollen joint count by more than 50%, a normal CRP level, and a rating of less than 20 on a visual analog scale of 0-100. At 3 months, patients should maintain clinically inactive disease with a glucocorticoid dose of less than 0.1 or 0.2 mg/kg per day. At 6 months, CID should be maintained without glucocorticoids.
While the authors of the recommendations noted that glucocorticoids are efficacious, their long-term use should be avoided because of safety issues. An interleukin-1 or IL-6 inhibitor should be prioritized and initiated as soon as possible after diagnosis.
Patients should maintain CID between 3 and 6 months before tapering off biologics.
The recommendations are congruent with the 2021 American College of Rheumatology’s guidelines for sJIA, noted Karen Onel, MD, pediatric rheumatologist, Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, and the principle investigator for the ACR guidelines. One main difference is that the EULAR recommendations included time lines for treatment targets, while the ACR’s did not.
“It’s great to have these time lines in there,” she said in an interview, though there are still some unknowns. “We don’t actually know what the tapering frequency should be,” she said, “but these are definitely goals that we need to explore and see how they evolve.”
MAS and lung complications
The EULAR recommendations also touched on two concerning complications, particularly in children: MAS and lung disease. According to the document, MAS should be considered in patients with Still’s disease with these symptoms: fever, splenomegaly, elevated serum ferritin, low cell counts, abnormal liver function tests, elevated serum triglycerides, and intravascular activation of coagulation. The MAS 2016 criteria can also be used to facilitate diagnosis.
“MAS treatment must include high-dose glucocorticoids,” the document states. “In addition, treatments including anakinra, ciclosporin, and/or interferon-gamma inhibitors should be considered as a part of initial therapy.”
The recommendations also addressed the risk for lung disease, “which is an emerging issue, particularly in children, that the physician should be very well aware of,” Dr. De Benedetti said. This complication can arise at any time point of the disease, he added.
The document advised actively screening for lung disease by searching for clinical symptoms such as digital clubbing, persistent cough, and shortness of breath. Pulmonary function tests like pulse oximetry and diffusing capacity of the lungs for carbon monoxide may also be used, but these standard lung function tests are very difficult to do in children under 6 years old, Dr. De Benedetti noted. The recommendations advise performing high-resolution CT in “any patients with clinical concerns.”
“We have lowered the threshold for CT scan because of the emerging features of this lung disease that may actually be lethal and therefore require prompt attention,” Dr. De Benedetti noted.
The recommendations for lung disease are “broad,” as there is still much to learn about the risk for lung disease in a small portion of sJIA patients, Dr. Onel said.
“There’s a lot that we are trying to work out about this; exactly how to screen, who to screen, what to do, who to treat, and how to treat really remains unclear,” she said. “We absolutely agree that this is a major, major issue that we need to come to some sort of agreement upon, but we’re just not there yet.”
Dr. De Benedetti, Dr. Fautrel, and Dr. Onel disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (sJIA) and adult-onset Still’s disease (AOSD) should be grouped into one disease, Still’s disease, according to new diagnosis and treatment recommendations presented at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology.
The recommendations, made in collaboration with EULAR and the Pediatric Rheumatology European Society, emphasized that the ultimate treatment target for Still’s disease should be drug-free remission in all patients and that macrophage activation syndrome (MAS) should be identified and treated as soon as possible.
The task force focused on MAS because despite effective, innovative therapies, “we continued to see MAS,” said presenter Bruno Fautrel, MD, Pitié-Salpêtrière University Hospital, Paris. “We have to be very concerned about this potential complication.”
Dr. Fautrel copresented the recommendations with Fabrizio De Benedetti, MD, PhD, head of the division of rheumatology, Bambino Gesù Hospital, Rome.
Diagnosis
Dr. Fautrel noted that the cutoff age of 16 that differentiates sJIA and AOSD is “arbitrary.” There are some differences in age: The frequency of the disease is higher in young children, but it plateaus in young adults. Children under 18 months old are also far more likely to develop MAS.
To diagnose and treat Still’s disease, the recommendations state that clinicians should consider four criteria:
- A fever spiking at or above 39° C (102.2° F) for at least 7 days.
- A transient rash, preferentially on the trunk, that coincides with fever spikes, rash is typically erythematous but other rashes, like urticaria, can be consistent with the diagnosis.
- Some musculoskeletal involvement is common, involving arthralgia/myalgia.
- High levels of inflammation identified by neutrophilic leukocytosis, increased serum C-reactive protein (CRP), and ferritin.
Dr. Fautrel noted that, while arthritis can be present, it is not necessary to make a diagnosis. In pediatrics, “arthritis is likely to happen after a few weeks of the evolution of the disease,” and waiting for arthritis to develop can lead to diagnostic delay, “which is a problem.”
For individuals with suspected Still’s disease, NSAIDs can be used as a “bridging therapy” before the diagnosis is confirmed.
Treatment
The recommendations emphasized that treatment and therapeutic strategy “should be based on shared decision-making between the parents/patients and the treating team,” with the ultimate goal of drug-free remission.
To achieve this goal, the document outlines time-based targets for clinically inactive disease (CID). At 4 weeks, patients should have no fever, reduction of active or swollen joint count by more than 50%, a normal CRP level, and a rating of less than 20 on a visual analog scale of 0-100. At 3 months, patients should maintain clinically inactive disease with a glucocorticoid dose of less than 0.1 or 0.2 mg/kg per day. At 6 months, CID should be maintained without glucocorticoids.
While the authors of the recommendations noted that glucocorticoids are efficacious, their long-term use should be avoided because of safety issues. An interleukin-1 or IL-6 inhibitor should be prioritized and initiated as soon as possible after diagnosis.
Patients should maintain CID between 3 and 6 months before tapering off biologics.
The recommendations are congruent with the 2021 American College of Rheumatology’s guidelines for sJIA, noted Karen Onel, MD, pediatric rheumatologist, Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, and the principle investigator for the ACR guidelines. One main difference is that the EULAR recommendations included time lines for treatment targets, while the ACR’s did not.
“It’s great to have these time lines in there,” she said in an interview, though there are still some unknowns. “We don’t actually know what the tapering frequency should be,” she said, “but these are definitely goals that we need to explore and see how they evolve.”
MAS and lung complications
The EULAR recommendations also touched on two concerning complications, particularly in children: MAS and lung disease. According to the document, MAS should be considered in patients with Still’s disease with these symptoms: fever, splenomegaly, elevated serum ferritin, low cell counts, abnormal liver function tests, elevated serum triglycerides, and intravascular activation of coagulation. The MAS 2016 criteria can also be used to facilitate diagnosis.
“MAS treatment must include high-dose glucocorticoids,” the document states. “In addition, treatments including anakinra, ciclosporin, and/or interferon-gamma inhibitors should be considered as a part of initial therapy.”
The recommendations also addressed the risk for lung disease, “which is an emerging issue, particularly in children, that the physician should be very well aware of,” Dr. De Benedetti said. This complication can arise at any time point of the disease, he added.
The document advised actively screening for lung disease by searching for clinical symptoms such as digital clubbing, persistent cough, and shortness of breath. Pulmonary function tests like pulse oximetry and diffusing capacity of the lungs for carbon monoxide may also be used, but these standard lung function tests are very difficult to do in children under 6 years old, Dr. De Benedetti noted. The recommendations advise performing high-resolution CT in “any patients with clinical concerns.”
“We have lowered the threshold for CT scan because of the emerging features of this lung disease that may actually be lethal and therefore require prompt attention,” Dr. De Benedetti noted.
The recommendations for lung disease are “broad,” as there is still much to learn about the risk for lung disease in a small portion of sJIA patients, Dr. Onel said.
“There’s a lot that we are trying to work out about this; exactly how to screen, who to screen, what to do, who to treat, and how to treat really remains unclear,” she said. “We absolutely agree that this is a major, major issue that we need to come to some sort of agreement upon, but we’re just not there yet.”
Dr. De Benedetti, Dr. Fautrel, and Dr. Onel disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM EULAR 2023
EULAR issues imaging recommendations for crystal-induced arthropathies
A European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology task force has released new guidance on imaging of crystal-induced arthropathies (CiA). The document provides recommendations for using imaging for diagnosis and monitoring of these types of diseases.
“These are the first-ever EULAR recommendations on imaging in this group of diseases. In fact, we are not aware of any similar international recommendations which provide guidance on which imaging technique, when, and how [they] should be used for crystal-induced arthropathies,” lead author Peter Mandl, MD, PhD, of the division of rheumatology at the Medical University of Vienna, told this news organization. Dr. Mandl presented the new recommendations at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology.
While some rheumatologists very familiar with crystal-induced arthropathies already regularly use imaging with these patients, these formal recommendations could highlight to wider audiences that “these imaging modalities can be very sensitive and specific for CiA,” said Sara K. Tedeschi, MD, MPH, assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and head of crystal-induced arthritis diseases at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. She was not involved with the work.
The document included general recommendations for imaging in CiA as well as specific recommendations for gout, basic calcium phosphate deposition disease (BCPD), and calcium pyrophosphate deposition disease (CPPD). Across all disease types, performing imaging on symptomatic areas as well as disease-specific target sites should be considered, the recommendations state. This includes the first metatarsophalangeal joint in gout, the wrist and knee in CPPD, and the shoulder in BCPD.
Both ultrasound (US) and dual-energy CT (DECT) are the recommended imaging modalities in gout. If imaging reveals characteristic features of monosodium urate (MSU) crystal deposition, synovial fluid analysis is not necessary to confirm a gout diagnosis. The volume of MSU crystals on imaging can also be used to predict future disease flares.
Showing imaging and explaining imaging findings may help patients understand their condition and adhere to treatment regimens, the recommendations state. “I think it’s a very powerful way to counsel patients,” Dr. Tedeschi said in an interview.
Imaging is necessary in the diagnosis of BCPD, and clinicians should use either conventional radiography or US. These imagining modalities are recommended for CPPD, and clinicians can use CT if they suspect axial involvement. The document does not recommend serial imaging for either BCPD or CPPD unless there has been an “unsuspected change in clinical characteristics.”
These recommendations highlight how imaging can have a “powerful impact on patient counseling and diagnosis,” said Dr. Tedeschi. She emphasized the importance of US training in rheumatology fellowship programs.
During his presentation at EULAR 2023, Dr. Mandl also highlighted a robust research agenda to further investigate how imaging can aid in the diagnosis and treatment of CiA. “It would be great to have an imaging modality someday that would help us differentiate between various types of calcium crystal,” he said.
Dr. Mandl has financial relationships with AbbVie, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Celgene, Eli Lilly, Janssen, Merck Sharp & Dohme, Novartis, Roche, and UCB. Dr. Tedeschi has worked as a consultant for Novartis.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
A European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology task force has released new guidance on imaging of crystal-induced arthropathies (CiA). The document provides recommendations for using imaging for diagnosis and monitoring of these types of diseases.
“These are the first-ever EULAR recommendations on imaging in this group of diseases. In fact, we are not aware of any similar international recommendations which provide guidance on which imaging technique, when, and how [they] should be used for crystal-induced arthropathies,” lead author Peter Mandl, MD, PhD, of the division of rheumatology at the Medical University of Vienna, told this news organization. Dr. Mandl presented the new recommendations at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology.
While some rheumatologists very familiar with crystal-induced arthropathies already regularly use imaging with these patients, these formal recommendations could highlight to wider audiences that “these imaging modalities can be very sensitive and specific for CiA,” said Sara K. Tedeschi, MD, MPH, assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and head of crystal-induced arthritis diseases at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. She was not involved with the work.
The document included general recommendations for imaging in CiA as well as specific recommendations for gout, basic calcium phosphate deposition disease (BCPD), and calcium pyrophosphate deposition disease (CPPD). Across all disease types, performing imaging on symptomatic areas as well as disease-specific target sites should be considered, the recommendations state. This includes the first metatarsophalangeal joint in gout, the wrist and knee in CPPD, and the shoulder in BCPD.
Both ultrasound (US) and dual-energy CT (DECT) are the recommended imaging modalities in gout. If imaging reveals characteristic features of monosodium urate (MSU) crystal deposition, synovial fluid analysis is not necessary to confirm a gout diagnosis. The volume of MSU crystals on imaging can also be used to predict future disease flares.
Showing imaging and explaining imaging findings may help patients understand their condition and adhere to treatment regimens, the recommendations state. “I think it’s a very powerful way to counsel patients,” Dr. Tedeschi said in an interview.
Imaging is necessary in the diagnosis of BCPD, and clinicians should use either conventional radiography or US. These imagining modalities are recommended for CPPD, and clinicians can use CT if they suspect axial involvement. The document does not recommend serial imaging for either BCPD or CPPD unless there has been an “unsuspected change in clinical characteristics.”
These recommendations highlight how imaging can have a “powerful impact on patient counseling and diagnosis,” said Dr. Tedeschi. She emphasized the importance of US training in rheumatology fellowship programs.
During his presentation at EULAR 2023, Dr. Mandl also highlighted a robust research agenda to further investigate how imaging can aid in the diagnosis and treatment of CiA. “It would be great to have an imaging modality someday that would help us differentiate between various types of calcium crystal,” he said.
Dr. Mandl has financial relationships with AbbVie, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Celgene, Eli Lilly, Janssen, Merck Sharp & Dohme, Novartis, Roche, and UCB. Dr. Tedeschi has worked as a consultant for Novartis.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
A European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology task force has released new guidance on imaging of crystal-induced arthropathies (CiA). The document provides recommendations for using imaging for diagnosis and monitoring of these types of diseases.
“These are the first-ever EULAR recommendations on imaging in this group of diseases. In fact, we are not aware of any similar international recommendations which provide guidance on which imaging technique, when, and how [they] should be used for crystal-induced arthropathies,” lead author Peter Mandl, MD, PhD, of the division of rheumatology at the Medical University of Vienna, told this news organization. Dr. Mandl presented the new recommendations at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology.
While some rheumatologists very familiar with crystal-induced arthropathies already regularly use imaging with these patients, these formal recommendations could highlight to wider audiences that “these imaging modalities can be very sensitive and specific for CiA,” said Sara K. Tedeschi, MD, MPH, assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and head of crystal-induced arthritis diseases at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. She was not involved with the work.
The document included general recommendations for imaging in CiA as well as specific recommendations for gout, basic calcium phosphate deposition disease (BCPD), and calcium pyrophosphate deposition disease (CPPD). Across all disease types, performing imaging on symptomatic areas as well as disease-specific target sites should be considered, the recommendations state. This includes the first metatarsophalangeal joint in gout, the wrist and knee in CPPD, and the shoulder in BCPD.
Both ultrasound (US) and dual-energy CT (DECT) are the recommended imaging modalities in gout. If imaging reveals characteristic features of monosodium urate (MSU) crystal deposition, synovial fluid analysis is not necessary to confirm a gout diagnosis. The volume of MSU crystals on imaging can also be used to predict future disease flares.
Showing imaging and explaining imaging findings may help patients understand their condition and adhere to treatment regimens, the recommendations state. “I think it’s a very powerful way to counsel patients,” Dr. Tedeschi said in an interview.
Imaging is necessary in the diagnosis of BCPD, and clinicians should use either conventional radiography or US. These imagining modalities are recommended for CPPD, and clinicians can use CT if they suspect axial involvement. The document does not recommend serial imaging for either BCPD or CPPD unless there has been an “unsuspected change in clinical characteristics.”
These recommendations highlight how imaging can have a “powerful impact on patient counseling and diagnosis,” said Dr. Tedeschi. She emphasized the importance of US training in rheumatology fellowship programs.
During his presentation at EULAR 2023, Dr. Mandl also highlighted a robust research agenda to further investigate how imaging can aid in the diagnosis and treatment of CiA. “It would be great to have an imaging modality someday that would help us differentiate between various types of calcium crystal,” he said.
Dr. Mandl has financial relationships with AbbVie, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Celgene, Eli Lilly, Janssen, Merck Sharp & Dohme, Novartis, Roche, and UCB. Dr. Tedeschi has worked as a consultant for Novartis.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM EULAR 2023
Final USPSTF recommendations on anxiety, depression, suicide risk
In line with draft recommendations, the task force for the first time has endorsed screening for anxiety disorders in all adults younger than age 65 without recognized signs or symptoms of anxiety.
This “B” recommendation reflects “moderate certainty” evidence that screening for anxiety in this population has a moderate net benefit. There currently is not enough evidence to recommend for or against screening for anxiety disorders in adults 65 and older, the task force said.
The USPSTF final recommendation statements and corresponding evidence summaries were published online in the Journal of the American Medical Association, as well as on the task force website.
Jury out on screening for suicide risk
The task force continues to recommend screening all adults for depression. This “B” recommendation reflects moderate-certainty evidence that screening for major depression in adults has a moderate net benefit.
However, there is not enough evidence to recommend for or against screening for suicide risk in all adults. Therefore, the task issued an “I” statement, indicating that the balance of benefits and harms cannot be determined at present.
“We are urgently calling for more research to determine the effectiveness of screening all adults for suicide risk and screening adults 65 and older for anxiety disorders,” task force member Gbenga Ogedegbe, MD, MPH, founding director of the Institute for Excellence in Health Equity at NYU Langone Health, New York, said in a statement.
The authors of an accompanying editorial noted that a positive screen result for anxiety “should be immediately followed with clinical evaluation for suicidality”.
Murray Stein, MD, MPH, and Linda Hill, MD, MPH, both with University of California, San Diego, also noted that a positive screen for anxiety could be indicative of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and clinicians should “be prepared to follow up with requisite questions about traumatic experiences that will be needed to home in on a diagnosis of PTSD that may require additional follow-up, referral, or both.
“Anxiety disorders can be distressing and disabling, and appropriate recognition and treatment can be life-altering and, in some cases, lifesaving, for patients,” Dr. Stein and Dr. Hill pointed out.
Effective, evidence-based psychological and pharmacologic treatments for anxiety disorders are available, they added. But the recommendation to routinely screen for anxiety disorder “must be accompanied by the recognition that there are too few mental health specialists available to manage the care of all patients with anxiety disorders, and even fewer who provide services for low-income and non-English-speaking populations,” they wrote.
This research report received no commercial funding. Disclosures for task force members and editorial writers are listed with the original articles.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
In line with draft recommendations, the task force for the first time has endorsed screening for anxiety disorders in all adults younger than age 65 without recognized signs or symptoms of anxiety.
This “B” recommendation reflects “moderate certainty” evidence that screening for anxiety in this population has a moderate net benefit. There currently is not enough evidence to recommend for or against screening for anxiety disorders in adults 65 and older, the task force said.
The USPSTF final recommendation statements and corresponding evidence summaries were published online in the Journal of the American Medical Association, as well as on the task force website.
Jury out on screening for suicide risk
The task force continues to recommend screening all adults for depression. This “B” recommendation reflects moderate-certainty evidence that screening for major depression in adults has a moderate net benefit.
However, there is not enough evidence to recommend for or against screening for suicide risk in all adults. Therefore, the task issued an “I” statement, indicating that the balance of benefits and harms cannot be determined at present.
“We are urgently calling for more research to determine the effectiveness of screening all adults for suicide risk and screening adults 65 and older for anxiety disorders,” task force member Gbenga Ogedegbe, MD, MPH, founding director of the Institute for Excellence in Health Equity at NYU Langone Health, New York, said in a statement.
The authors of an accompanying editorial noted that a positive screen result for anxiety “should be immediately followed with clinical evaluation for suicidality”.
Murray Stein, MD, MPH, and Linda Hill, MD, MPH, both with University of California, San Diego, also noted that a positive screen for anxiety could be indicative of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and clinicians should “be prepared to follow up with requisite questions about traumatic experiences that will be needed to home in on a diagnosis of PTSD that may require additional follow-up, referral, or both.
“Anxiety disorders can be distressing and disabling, and appropriate recognition and treatment can be life-altering and, in some cases, lifesaving, for patients,” Dr. Stein and Dr. Hill pointed out.
Effective, evidence-based psychological and pharmacologic treatments for anxiety disorders are available, they added. But the recommendation to routinely screen for anxiety disorder “must be accompanied by the recognition that there are too few mental health specialists available to manage the care of all patients with anxiety disorders, and even fewer who provide services for low-income and non-English-speaking populations,” they wrote.
This research report received no commercial funding. Disclosures for task force members and editorial writers are listed with the original articles.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
In line with draft recommendations, the task force for the first time has endorsed screening for anxiety disorders in all adults younger than age 65 without recognized signs or symptoms of anxiety.
This “B” recommendation reflects “moderate certainty” evidence that screening for anxiety in this population has a moderate net benefit. There currently is not enough evidence to recommend for or against screening for anxiety disorders in adults 65 and older, the task force said.
The USPSTF final recommendation statements and corresponding evidence summaries were published online in the Journal of the American Medical Association, as well as on the task force website.
Jury out on screening for suicide risk
The task force continues to recommend screening all adults for depression. This “B” recommendation reflects moderate-certainty evidence that screening for major depression in adults has a moderate net benefit.
However, there is not enough evidence to recommend for or against screening for suicide risk in all adults. Therefore, the task issued an “I” statement, indicating that the balance of benefits and harms cannot be determined at present.
“We are urgently calling for more research to determine the effectiveness of screening all adults for suicide risk and screening adults 65 and older for anxiety disorders,” task force member Gbenga Ogedegbe, MD, MPH, founding director of the Institute for Excellence in Health Equity at NYU Langone Health, New York, said in a statement.
The authors of an accompanying editorial noted that a positive screen result for anxiety “should be immediately followed with clinical evaluation for suicidality”.
Murray Stein, MD, MPH, and Linda Hill, MD, MPH, both with University of California, San Diego, also noted that a positive screen for anxiety could be indicative of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and clinicians should “be prepared to follow up with requisite questions about traumatic experiences that will be needed to home in on a diagnosis of PTSD that may require additional follow-up, referral, or both.
“Anxiety disorders can be distressing and disabling, and appropriate recognition and treatment can be life-altering and, in some cases, lifesaving, for patients,” Dr. Stein and Dr. Hill pointed out.
Effective, evidence-based psychological and pharmacologic treatments for anxiety disorders are available, they added. But the recommendation to routinely screen for anxiety disorder “must be accompanied by the recognition that there are too few mental health specialists available to manage the care of all patients with anxiety disorders, and even fewer who provide services for low-income and non-English-speaking populations,” they wrote.
This research report received no commercial funding. Disclosures for task force members and editorial writers are listed with the original articles.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
New EULAR lupus recommendations advise using biologics, tapering steroids
MILAN – Treatment of systemic lupus erythematosus with biologics may enable steroid tapering while ensuring the achievement of remission or low disease activity in more patients with fewer flares and less organ damage, as well as leading to better responses if used early, according to the latest recommendations on the management of SLE from the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology (EULAR).
Dimitrios Boumpas, MD, president of the Athens Medical Society and chair of the European Task force on SLE, presented the recommendations at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology. “Although steroids save lives, it is at the expense of excessive collateral damage. They are better for short-term use as a rescue or bridging therapy but may be used in some patients at 5 mg/day of prednisone or less, rather than the previous 7.5 mg/day,” he emphasized.
The 2023 recommendations cover new treatment strategies with more ambitious goals, new data on adverse effects of chronic glucocorticoid use, and newly approved agents and combination therapies.
“Most importantly, we sourced help from experts from all over the world,” said Dr. Boumpas, describing the task force that included 35 rheumatologists, 5 nephrologists, 2 methodologists, 2 patient representatives, and 2 fellows, all brought together from across Europe, North America, Asia, and Australia.
Over 7,000 papers were reviewed, with 437 included in the systematic literature review to inform the updated recommendations.
Session moderator Robert Landewé, MD, PhD, professor of clinical immunology and rheumatology at the University of Amsterdam, said that “the underlying heterogeneity and multisystem involvement of SLE can make it difficult to demonstrate and know which drugs work in the condition. However, these latest recommendations should encourage greater confidence to taper steroids early on and perhaps consider new biologic drugs, so that more patients can achieve better results sooner to prevent flares and organ damage, improve prognosis, and enhance their quality of life.”
Dr. Boumpas provided a summary of the overarching principles that guide the recommendations. These say that SLE requires multidisciplinary individualized management; disease activity should be assessed at each visit; nonpharmacologic interventions such as sun protection, smoking cessation, and following a healthy diet are all important for improving long-term outcomes; pharmacologic interventions are to be directed by patient characteristics, type and severity of organ involvement, treatment-related harms, and patient preferences, among other factors; and early SLE diagnosis is essential to prevent flares and organ damage, improve prognosis, and enhance quality of life.
Referring to each recommendation statement in turn, Dr. Boumpas provided a detailed description of each, and highlighted any changes since the 2019 recommendations.
Hydroxychloroquine, glucocorticoids as bridging therapy, and biologics
Referring to statement 1, Dr. Boumpas reported that hydroxychloroquine should be a first-line therapy at a dose of 5 mg/kg, but this dose should be individualized based on risk of flare and retinal toxicity. “There was some discussion about monitoring blood levels, but this was to ensure adherence only,” said Dr. Boumpas.
Continuing to statement 2, he added, “here is one change. With chronic use of glucocorticoids, the maintenance dose is 5 mg/day or less or prednisone equivalent. This pertains to both new onset and relapsing disease.” Previous recommendations advised a maintenance dose of 7.5 mg/day or less.
But he pointed out that “we are discussing using glucocorticoids in lupus as a bridging therapy only, for short, limited periods of time. We should shy away from chronic use of glucocorticoids and only use them for 3 months, and to do this we need to use glucocorticoid-sparing strategies.”
This led to statement 3, which refers to glucocorticoid-sparing strategies. Dr. Boumpas explained that, in patients who are not responding to hydroxychloroquine or unable to reduce glucocorticoids further during chronic use, add immunosuppressive agents, such as methotrexate and/or biologics (for example, belimumab [Benlysta] or anifrolumab [Saphnelo]).
“To allow flexibility for patients and clinicians, it isn’t necessary to use DMARDs [disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs] first if you prefer biologics,” he continued. “We are becoming more liberal with the use of biologics because there are new data that confirm the efficacy of belimumab in extrarenal SLE, plus good data with 3-year extension with anifrolumab.”
Statement 4 says that for patients with organ- or life-threatening disease, intravenous cyclophosphamide, “our old friend,” should be considered, while in refractory cases, rituximab may be considered, Dr. Boumpas said. “It’s okay to use cyclophosphamide. It isn’t a sin.”
Statement 5 refers to skin disease, and Dr. Boumpas explained that good data suggested that biologics help, including both belimumab and anifrolumab.
Nothing has changed with statement 6 concerning neuropsychiatric lupus, said Dr. Boumpas. “Glucocorticoids, immunosuppressive, and antithrombotic therapies should be considered.”
Regarding hematologic disease (statement 7), he said, “the new kid on the block is MMF [mycophenolate mofetil]. For acute treatment, still use the same drugs, including rituximab, but for maintenance you may use rituximab, azathioprine, MMF, or cyclosporine.”
Lupus nephritis
Turning to what Dr. Boumpas described as the “reason you had all come here, and what you had been waiting for ... what’s changing with lupus nephritis?” he said.
Statement 8 describes initial therapy in active lupus nephritis. Dr. Boumpas said that low-dose, intravenous cyclophosphamide or mycophenolate should be considered, but also that belimumab or a calcineurin inhibitor (CNI) should be considered at the start. The changes were based on two successful phase 3 trials of belimumab and voclosporin, with belimumab being associated with a reduced flare rate and estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR).
“Changes from 2019 include that there is no distinction between classes III/IV and V, which is heretical,” he stressed. Belimumab and CNIs/voclosporin should be considered in all patents as an add-on therapy from the start. “Lupus nephritis has high morbidity, and it’s difficult to predict outcomes at the beginning, but there are clear benefits of add-on therapies. CNIs, although they can be used for all patients, might be more appropriate for membranous or nephrotic-range proteinuria.”
He went on to announce that the “million-dollar question” was whether to use belimumab or voclosporin (or other CNIs), and that this was “a question of gentle, compared with forceful, power and collateral damage.
“For me, voclosporin works very fast, but you worry about side effects, while belimumab is gentle and the response is sustained, preventing flares and organ damage,” he said, adding that “our expert panel discussions showed that nephrologists were more eager to support steroid-free regimens.”
Moving on to statement 9, Dr. Boumpas explained that after initial therapy and renal response, subsequent therapy should continue for at least 3 years. If treated with MMF alone or in combination with belimumab, then these drugs should continue. However, MMF should replace cyclophosphamide if the latter is used initially.
Regarding treat-to-target in lupus nephritis, he said that EULAR now advises to aim for a 25% drop in urine protein/creatinine ratio by 3 months, a 50% drop by 6 months, and a UPCR of less than 0.5-0.7, plus normal eGFR, by 12 months, Dr. Boumpas said.
Statement 10 advises considering high-dose intravenous cyclophosphamide in combination with pulse intravenous methylprednisolone for patients at high risk of renal failure.
Tapering drugs in sustained remission, managing antiphospholipid syndrome, giving immunizations
Statement 11 suggests to consider tapering immunosuppressive agents and glucocorticoids in patients achieving sustained remission, starting with glucocorticoids first.
There was no change to statement 12, which recommends that thrombotic antiphospholipid syndrome associated with SLE be treated with long-term vitamin K antagonists.
Statement 13 addresses immunizations and adjunct therapies. In addition to conventional immunizations, Dr. Boumpas said that renoprotection should receive attention in case of proteinuria and/or hypertension.
“With [sodium-glucose cotransporter 2] inhibitors, it’s a bit early. They’re promising, and you may consider them, although there are no data for patients with eGFR below 60 mL/min per 1.73 m2,” he remarked, completing his detailed discussion of the updated recommendations.
Dr. Boumpas reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Landewé served as past chair of EULAR’s Quality of Care Committee, which develops recommendations.
MILAN – Treatment of systemic lupus erythematosus with biologics may enable steroid tapering while ensuring the achievement of remission or low disease activity in more patients with fewer flares and less organ damage, as well as leading to better responses if used early, according to the latest recommendations on the management of SLE from the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology (EULAR).
Dimitrios Boumpas, MD, president of the Athens Medical Society and chair of the European Task force on SLE, presented the recommendations at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology. “Although steroids save lives, it is at the expense of excessive collateral damage. They are better for short-term use as a rescue or bridging therapy but may be used in some patients at 5 mg/day of prednisone or less, rather than the previous 7.5 mg/day,” he emphasized.
The 2023 recommendations cover new treatment strategies with more ambitious goals, new data on adverse effects of chronic glucocorticoid use, and newly approved agents and combination therapies.
“Most importantly, we sourced help from experts from all over the world,” said Dr. Boumpas, describing the task force that included 35 rheumatologists, 5 nephrologists, 2 methodologists, 2 patient representatives, and 2 fellows, all brought together from across Europe, North America, Asia, and Australia.
Over 7,000 papers were reviewed, with 437 included in the systematic literature review to inform the updated recommendations.
Session moderator Robert Landewé, MD, PhD, professor of clinical immunology and rheumatology at the University of Amsterdam, said that “the underlying heterogeneity and multisystem involvement of SLE can make it difficult to demonstrate and know which drugs work in the condition. However, these latest recommendations should encourage greater confidence to taper steroids early on and perhaps consider new biologic drugs, so that more patients can achieve better results sooner to prevent flares and organ damage, improve prognosis, and enhance their quality of life.”
Dr. Boumpas provided a summary of the overarching principles that guide the recommendations. These say that SLE requires multidisciplinary individualized management; disease activity should be assessed at each visit; nonpharmacologic interventions such as sun protection, smoking cessation, and following a healthy diet are all important for improving long-term outcomes; pharmacologic interventions are to be directed by patient characteristics, type and severity of organ involvement, treatment-related harms, and patient preferences, among other factors; and early SLE diagnosis is essential to prevent flares and organ damage, improve prognosis, and enhance quality of life.
Referring to each recommendation statement in turn, Dr. Boumpas provided a detailed description of each, and highlighted any changes since the 2019 recommendations.
Hydroxychloroquine, glucocorticoids as bridging therapy, and biologics
Referring to statement 1, Dr. Boumpas reported that hydroxychloroquine should be a first-line therapy at a dose of 5 mg/kg, but this dose should be individualized based on risk of flare and retinal toxicity. “There was some discussion about monitoring blood levels, but this was to ensure adherence only,” said Dr. Boumpas.
Continuing to statement 2, he added, “here is one change. With chronic use of glucocorticoids, the maintenance dose is 5 mg/day or less or prednisone equivalent. This pertains to both new onset and relapsing disease.” Previous recommendations advised a maintenance dose of 7.5 mg/day or less.
But he pointed out that “we are discussing using glucocorticoids in lupus as a bridging therapy only, for short, limited periods of time. We should shy away from chronic use of glucocorticoids and only use them for 3 months, and to do this we need to use glucocorticoid-sparing strategies.”
This led to statement 3, which refers to glucocorticoid-sparing strategies. Dr. Boumpas explained that, in patients who are not responding to hydroxychloroquine or unable to reduce glucocorticoids further during chronic use, add immunosuppressive agents, such as methotrexate and/or biologics (for example, belimumab [Benlysta] or anifrolumab [Saphnelo]).
“To allow flexibility for patients and clinicians, it isn’t necessary to use DMARDs [disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs] first if you prefer biologics,” he continued. “We are becoming more liberal with the use of biologics because there are new data that confirm the efficacy of belimumab in extrarenal SLE, plus good data with 3-year extension with anifrolumab.”
Statement 4 says that for patients with organ- or life-threatening disease, intravenous cyclophosphamide, “our old friend,” should be considered, while in refractory cases, rituximab may be considered, Dr. Boumpas said. “It’s okay to use cyclophosphamide. It isn’t a sin.”
Statement 5 refers to skin disease, and Dr. Boumpas explained that good data suggested that biologics help, including both belimumab and anifrolumab.
Nothing has changed with statement 6 concerning neuropsychiatric lupus, said Dr. Boumpas. “Glucocorticoids, immunosuppressive, and antithrombotic therapies should be considered.”
Regarding hematologic disease (statement 7), he said, “the new kid on the block is MMF [mycophenolate mofetil]. For acute treatment, still use the same drugs, including rituximab, but for maintenance you may use rituximab, azathioprine, MMF, or cyclosporine.”
Lupus nephritis
Turning to what Dr. Boumpas described as the “reason you had all come here, and what you had been waiting for ... what’s changing with lupus nephritis?” he said.
Statement 8 describes initial therapy in active lupus nephritis. Dr. Boumpas said that low-dose, intravenous cyclophosphamide or mycophenolate should be considered, but also that belimumab or a calcineurin inhibitor (CNI) should be considered at the start. The changes were based on two successful phase 3 trials of belimumab and voclosporin, with belimumab being associated with a reduced flare rate and estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR).
“Changes from 2019 include that there is no distinction between classes III/IV and V, which is heretical,” he stressed. Belimumab and CNIs/voclosporin should be considered in all patents as an add-on therapy from the start. “Lupus nephritis has high morbidity, and it’s difficult to predict outcomes at the beginning, but there are clear benefits of add-on therapies. CNIs, although they can be used for all patients, might be more appropriate for membranous or nephrotic-range proteinuria.”
He went on to announce that the “million-dollar question” was whether to use belimumab or voclosporin (or other CNIs), and that this was “a question of gentle, compared with forceful, power and collateral damage.
“For me, voclosporin works very fast, but you worry about side effects, while belimumab is gentle and the response is sustained, preventing flares and organ damage,” he said, adding that “our expert panel discussions showed that nephrologists were more eager to support steroid-free regimens.”
Moving on to statement 9, Dr. Boumpas explained that after initial therapy and renal response, subsequent therapy should continue for at least 3 years. If treated with MMF alone or in combination with belimumab, then these drugs should continue. However, MMF should replace cyclophosphamide if the latter is used initially.
Regarding treat-to-target in lupus nephritis, he said that EULAR now advises to aim for a 25% drop in urine protein/creatinine ratio by 3 months, a 50% drop by 6 months, and a UPCR of less than 0.5-0.7, plus normal eGFR, by 12 months, Dr. Boumpas said.
Statement 10 advises considering high-dose intravenous cyclophosphamide in combination with pulse intravenous methylprednisolone for patients at high risk of renal failure.
Tapering drugs in sustained remission, managing antiphospholipid syndrome, giving immunizations
Statement 11 suggests to consider tapering immunosuppressive agents and glucocorticoids in patients achieving sustained remission, starting with glucocorticoids first.
There was no change to statement 12, which recommends that thrombotic antiphospholipid syndrome associated with SLE be treated with long-term vitamin K antagonists.
Statement 13 addresses immunizations and adjunct therapies. In addition to conventional immunizations, Dr. Boumpas said that renoprotection should receive attention in case of proteinuria and/or hypertension.
“With [sodium-glucose cotransporter 2] inhibitors, it’s a bit early. They’re promising, and you may consider them, although there are no data for patients with eGFR below 60 mL/min per 1.73 m2,” he remarked, completing his detailed discussion of the updated recommendations.
Dr. Boumpas reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Landewé served as past chair of EULAR’s Quality of Care Committee, which develops recommendations.
MILAN – Treatment of systemic lupus erythematosus with biologics may enable steroid tapering while ensuring the achievement of remission or low disease activity in more patients with fewer flares and less organ damage, as well as leading to better responses if used early, according to the latest recommendations on the management of SLE from the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology (EULAR).
Dimitrios Boumpas, MD, president of the Athens Medical Society and chair of the European Task force on SLE, presented the recommendations at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology. “Although steroids save lives, it is at the expense of excessive collateral damage. They are better for short-term use as a rescue or bridging therapy but may be used in some patients at 5 mg/day of prednisone or less, rather than the previous 7.5 mg/day,” he emphasized.
The 2023 recommendations cover new treatment strategies with more ambitious goals, new data on adverse effects of chronic glucocorticoid use, and newly approved agents and combination therapies.
“Most importantly, we sourced help from experts from all over the world,” said Dr. Boumpas, describing the task force that included 35 rheumatologists, 5 nephrologists, 2 methodologists, 2 patient representatives, and 2 fellows, all brought together from across Europe, North America, Asia, and Australia.
Over 7,000 papers were reviewed, with 437 included in the systematic literature review to inform the updated recommendations.
Session moderator Robert Landewé, MD, PhD, professor of clinical immunology and rheumatology at the University of Amsterdam, said that “the underlying heterogeneity and multisystem involvement of SLE can make it difficult to demonstrate and know which drugs work in the condition. However, these latest recommendations should encourage greater confidence to taper steroids early on and perhaps consider new biologic drugs, so that more patients can achieve better results sooner to prevent flares and organ damage, improve prognosis, and enhance their quality of life.”
Dr. Boumpas provided a summary of the overarching principles that guide the recommendations. These say that SLE requires multidisciplinary individualized management; disease activity should be assessed at each visit; nonpharmacologic interventions such as sun protection, smoking cessation, and following a healthy diet are all important for improving long-term outcomes; pharmacologic interventions are to be directed by patient characteristics, type and severity of organ involvement, treatment-related harms, and patient preferences, among other factors; and early SLE diagnosis is essential to prevent flares and organ damage, improve prognosis, and enhance quality of life.
Referring to each recommendation statement in turn, Dr. Boumpas provided a detailed description of each, and highlighted any changes since the 2019 recommendations.
Hydroxychloroquine, glucocorticoids as bridging therapy, and biologics
Referring to statement 1, Dr. Boumpas reported that hydroxychloroquine should be a first-line therapy at a dose of 5 mg/kg, but this dose should be individualized based on risk of flare and retinal toxicity. “There was some discussion about monitoring blood levels, but this was to ensure adherence only,” said Dr. Boumpas.
Continuing to statement 2, he added, “here is one change. With chronic use of glucocorticoids, the maintenance dose is 5 mg/day or less or prednisone equivalent. This pertains to both new onset and relapsing disease.” Previous recommendations advised a maintenance dose of 7.5 mg/day or less.
But he pointed out that “we are discussing using glucocorticoids in lupus as a bridging therapy only, for short, limited periods of time. We should shy away from chronic use of glucocorticoids and only use them for 3 months, and to do this we need to use glucocorticoid-sparing strategies.”
This led to statement 3, which refers to glucocorticoid-sparing strategies. Dr. Boumpas explained that, in patients who are not responding to hydroxychloroquine or unable to reduce glucocorticoids further during chronic use, add immunosuppressive agents, such as methotrexate and/or biologics (for example, belimumab [Benlysta] or anifrolumab [Saphnelo]).
“To allow flexibility for patients and clinicians, it isn’t necessary to use DMARDs [disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs] first if you prefer biologics,” he continued. “We are becoming more liberal with the use of biologics because there are new data that confirm the efficacy of belimumab in extrarenal SLE, plus good data with 3-year extension with anifrolumab.”
Statement 4 says that for patients with organ- or life-threatening disease, intravenous cyclophosphamide, “our old friend,” should be considered, while in refractory cases, rituximab may be considered, Dr. Boumpas said. “It’s okay to use cyclophosphamide. It isn’t a sin.”
Statement 5 refers to skin disease, and Dr. Boumpas explained that good data suggested that biologics help, including both belimumab and anifrolumab.
Nothing has changed with statement 6 concerning neuropsychiatric lupus, said Dr. Boumpas. “Glucocorticoids, immunosuppressive, and antithrombotic therapies should be considered.”
Regarding hematologic disease (statement 7), he said, “the new kid on the block is MMF [mycophenolate mofetil]. For acute treatment, still use the same drugs, including rituximab, but for maintenance you may use rituximab, azathioprine, MMF, or cyclosporine.”
Lupus nephritis
Turning to what Dr. Boumpas described as the “reason you had all come here, and what you had been waiting for ... what’s changing with lupus nephritis?” he said.
Statement 8 describes initial therapy in active lupus nephritis. Dr. Boumpas said that low-dose, intravenous cyclophosphamide or mycophenolate should be considered, but also that belimumab or a calcineurin inhibitor (CNI) should be considered at the start. The changes were based on two successful phase 3 trials of belimumab and voclosporin, with belimumab being associated with a reduced flare rate and estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR).
“Changes from 2019 include that there is no distinction between classes III/IV and V, which is heretical,” he stressed. Belimumab and CNIs/voclosporin should be considered in all patents as an add-on therapy from the start. “Lupus nephritis has high morbidity, and it’s difficult to predict outcomes at the beginning, but there are clear benefits of add-on therapies. CNIs, although they can be used for all patients, might be more appropriate for membranous or nephrotic-range proteinuria.”
He went on to announce that the “million-dollar question” was whether to use belimumab or voclosporin (or other CNIs), and that this was “a question of gentle, compared with forceful, power and collateral damage.
“For me, voclosporin works very fast, but you worry about side effects, while belimumab is gentle and the response is sustained, preventing flares and organ damage,” he said, adding that “our expert panel discussions showed that nephrologists were more eager to support steroid-free regimens.”
Moving on to statement 9, Dr. Boumpas explained that after initial therapy and renal response, subsequent therapy should continue for at least 3 years. If treated with MMF alone or in combination with belimumab, then these drugs should continue. However, MMF should replace cyclophosphamide if the latter is used initially.
Regarding treat-to-target in lupus nephritis, he said that EULAR now advises to aim for a 25% drop in urine protein/creatinine ratio by 3 months, a 50% drop by 6 months, and a UPCR of less than 0.5-0.7, plus normal eGFR, by 12 months, Dr. Boumpas said.
Statement 10 advises considering high-dose intravenous cyclophosphamide in combination with pulse intravenous methylprednisolone for patients at high risk of renal failure.
Tapering drugs in sustained remission, managing antiphospholipid syndrome, giving immunizations
Statement 11 suggests to consider tapering immunosuppressive agents and glucocorticoids in patients achieving sustained remission, starting with glucocorticoids first.
There was no change to statement 12, which recommends that thrombotic antiphospholipid syndrome associated with SLE be treated with long-term vitamin K antagonists.
Statement 13 addresses immunizations and adjunct therapies. In addition to conventional immunizations, Dr. Boumpas said that renoprotection should receive attention in case of proteinuria and/or hypertension.
“With [sodium-glucose cotransporter 2] inhibitors, it’s a bit early. They’re promising, and you may consider them, although there are no data for patients with eGFR below 60 mL/min per 1.73 m2,” he remarked, completing his detailed discussion of the updated recommendations.
Dr. Boumpas reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Landewé served as past chair of EULAR’s Quality of Care Committee, which develops recommendations.
AT EULAR 2023
EULAR PsA recommendations update emphasizes safety, nonmusculoskeletal manifestations
AT EULAR 2023
MILAN – Safety considerations, particularly regarding the use of Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors, are of utmost importance in the 2023 update to recommendations for managing psoriatic arthritis (PsA) by the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology (EULAR). Additionally, the selection of therapy should now take into account the complete clinical presentation, explicitly considering nonmusculoskeletal manifestations.
Presenting the updated recommendations, Laure Gossec, MD, PhD, professor of rheumatology at Pitié-Salpétriere Hospital and Sorbonne University, Paris, emphasized an increasingly manifestation-oriented approach, integrating a growing range of available drugs in a stepwise manner to optimize the balance between safety and efficacy and achieve the highest quality of care. These updates were developed over the past 8 months, guided by a comprehensive review of drug efficacy based on 38 publications covering 18 drugs, as well as a safety review encompassing 24 publications.
Safety considerations with JAK inhibitors
Expanding on the existing six overarching principles from the 2019 recommendations, the PsA EULAR recommendations now introduce a seventh principle: “The choice of treatment should consider safety considerations regarding individual modes of action to optimize the benefit-risk profile.”
This addition was prompted by recent safety data on JAK inhibitors, which revealed serious potential side effects, such as heart attacks, blood clots, cancer, and severe infections, that recently prompted the European Medicines Agency to restrict their use. As indicated by the new principle, safety considerations have been incorporated into several recommendations.
For instance, in the context of peripheral arthritis, JAK inhibitors may now be considered if there is an inadequate response to at least one conventional synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (csDMARD) such as methotrexate, sulfasalazine, or leflunomide, and at least one biologic DMARD (bDMARD).
Alternatively, JAK inhibitors may be utilized when bDMARDs are not suitable for other reasons. However, EULAR now emphasizes caution whenever JAK inhibitors are mentioned. Specifically, “careful consideration is necessary for patients aged 65 or above, current or past long-time smokers, individuals with a history of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease or other cardiovascular risk factors, those with other malignancy risk factors, or individuals with a known risk for venous thromboembolism.”
Consider nonmusculoskeletal manifestations in treatment decisions
In another significant update, EULAR now recommends that the choice of therapy should also consider nonmusculoskeletal manifestations associated with PsA. “There is a notable shift in perspective here,” Dr. Gossec told this news organization. Clinically relevant skin involvement should prompt the use of IL-17A or IL-17A/F or IL-23 or IL-12/23 inhibitors, while uveitis should be treated with tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitors.
In the case of inflammatory bowel disease, EULAR advises the use of anti-TNF agents, IL-12/23 or IL-23 inhibitors, or a JAK inhibitor. The recommended course of action within each treatment category is not ranked in order of preference, but EULAR emphasizes the importance of following EMA recommendations and considering safety.
Systemic glucocorticoids removed
Certain medications have been removed from the recommendations, reflecting the heightened focus on treatment safety. The use of systemic glucocorticoids as adjunctive therapy is no longer recommended. “We always had reservations about their use, and now we have eliminated them. We are aware that they are still utilized, with 30% of patients in Germany, for instance, receiving low doses of glucocorticoids. However, the long-term efficacy/safety balance of glucocorticoids is unfavorable in any disease, particularly in patients with psoriatic arthritis and multiple comorbidities,” Dr. Gossec explained.
NSAIDs and local glucocorticoids are now limited to specific patient populations, namely those affected by oligoarthritis without poor prognostic factors, entheseal disease, or predominant axial disease. Their use should be short-term, generally no longer than 4 weeks. Polyarthritis or oligoarthritis with poor prognostic factors should instead be treated directly with csDMARDs.
No specific biologic treatment order recommended for peripheral arthritis
Regarding patients with peripheral arthritis, recent efficacy data have led EULAR to refrain from recommending any specific order of preference for the use of bDMARDs, which encompass TNF inhibitors and drugs targeting the IL-17 and IL-12/23 pathways. “We lack the data to propose an order of preference in patients with peripheral arthritis. Different classes of molecules exhibit efficacy in joint inflammation, generally resulting in a 50% response rate and similar overall effects,” said Dr. Gossec, referencing head-to-head trials between biologics that yielded very comparable results, such as the EXCEED trial or SPIRIT-H2H trial.
The updated recommendations now consider two IL-23p19 inhibitors, guselkumab (Tremfya) and risankizumab (Skyrizi), the JAK inhibitor upadacitinib (Rinvoq), and the very recently EMA-approved bimekizumab (Bimzelx), an IL-17A/F double inhibitor.
The recommendation for patients with mono- or oligoarthritis and poor prognostic factors now aligns with the previous recommendations for polyarthritis: A csDMARD should be initiated promptly, with a preference for methotrexate if significant skin involvement is present. New data suggest that methotrexate may be beneficial for enthesitis, achieving resolution in approximately 30% of patients. When considering treatment options, JAK inhibitors may also be taken into account, with safety considerations in mind.
In cases of clinically relevant axial disease and an inadequate response to NSAIDs, therapy with an IL-17A inhibitor, a TNF inhibitor, an IL-17A/F inhibitor, or a JAK inhibitor may be considered. This approach now aligns with the most recent axial spondyloarthritis recommendation from EULAR and the Assessment of SpondyloArthritis international Society (ASAS).
Which disease manifestation to treat first?
During the discussion, chairwoman Uta Kiltz, MD, PhD, a rheumatologist at Rheumatism Center Ruhrgebiet, Herne, Germany, and clinical lecturer at Ruhr University Bochum, inquired about identifying the primary manifestation to guide the course of action.
“Psoriatic arthritis is highly heterogeneous, and determining the predominant manifestation is sometimes challenging,” Dr. Gossec said. “However, we believe that a certain order of preference is necessary when making treatment decisions. Starting with peripheral arthritis, which can lead to structural damage, allows for treatment selection based on that aspect. If peripheral arthritis is not present, attention should be directed towards axial disease, ensuring the presence of actual inflammation rather than solely axial pain, as mechanical origin axial pain can occur due to the patient’s age.”
David Liew, MBBS, PhD, consultant rheumatologist and clinical pharmacologist at Austin Health in Melbourne, commented on the update to this news organization: “We are fortunate to have a wide range of targeted therapy options for psoriatic arthritis, and these guidelines reflect this abundance of choices. They emphasize the importance of selecting therapies based on specific disease manifestations and tailoring care to each patient’s unique type of psoriatic arthritis. It’s worth noting that some changes in these guidelines were influenced by regulatory changes following ORAL Surveillance. In an era of numerous options, we can afford to be selective at times.”
Regarding safety concerns and JAK inhibitors, Dr. Liew added: “It is not surprising to see these guidelines impose certain restrictions on the use of JAK inhibitors, especially in psoriatic arthritis, where other therapies offer distinct advantages. Until high-quality evidence convincingly points away from a class effect, we can expect to see similar provisions in many more guidelines.”
Many of the recommendations’ authors report financial relationships with one or more pharmaceutical companies. These include AbbVie, Amgen, Biogen, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Boehringer Ingelheim, Celgene, Celltrion, Chugai, Galapagos, Gilead, GlaxoSmithKline, Janssen, Leo, Lilly, Medac, Merck, Merck Sharp & Dohme, Novartis, Pfizer, R-Pharma, Regeneron, Roche, Sandoz, Sanofi, Takeda, UCB, and Viatris.
EULAR funded the development of the recommendations.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
AT EULAR 2023
MILAN – Safety considerations, particularly regarding the use of Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors, are of utmost importance in the 2023 update to recommendations for managing psoriatic arthritis (PsA) by the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology (EULAR). Additionally, the selection of therapy should now take into account the complete clinical presentation, explicitly considering nonmusculoskeletal manifestations.
Presenting the updated recommendations, Laure Gossec, MD, PhD, professor of rheumatology at Pitié-Salpétriere Hospital and Sorbonne University, Paris, emphasized an increasingly manifestation-oriented approach, integrating a growing range of available drugs in a stepwise manner to optimize the balance between safety and efficacy and achieve the highest quality of care. These updates were developed over the past 8 months, guided by a comprehensive review of drug efficacy based on 38 publications covering 18 drugs, as well as a safety review encompassing 24 publications.
Safety considerations with JAK inhibitors
Expanding on the existing six overarching principles from the 2019 recommendations, the PsA EULAR recommendations now introduce a seventh principle: “The choice of treatment should consider safety considerations regarding individual modes of action to optimize the benefit-risk profile.”
This addition was prompted by recent safety data on JAK inhibitors, which revealed serious potential side effects, such as heart attacks, blood clots, cancer, and severe infections, that recently prompted the European Medicines Agency to restrict their use. As indicated by the new principle, safety considerations have been incorporated into several recommendations.
For instance, in the context of peripheral arthritis, JAK inhibitors may now be considered if there is an inadequate response to at least one conventional synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (csDMARD) such as methotrexate, sulfasalazine, or leflunomide, and at least one biologic DMARD (bDMARD).
Alternatively, JAK inhibitors may be utilized when bDMARDs are not suitable for other reasons. However, EULAR now emphasizes caution whenever JAK inhibitors are mentioned. Specifically, “careful consideration is necessary for patients aged 65 or above, current or past long-time smokers, individuals with a history of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease or other cardiovascular risk factors, those with other malignancy risk factors, or individuals with a known risk for venous thromboembolism.”
Consider nonmusculoskeletal manifestations in treatment decisions
In another significant update, EULAR now recommends that the choice of therapy should also consider nonmusculoskeletal manifestations associated with PsA. “There is a notable shift in perspective here,” Dr. Gossec told this news organization. Clinically relevant skin involvement should prompt the use of IL-17A or IL-17A/F or IL-23 or IL-12/23 inhibitors, while uveitis should be treated with tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitors.
In the case of inflammatory bowel disease, EULAR advises the use of anti-TNF agents, IL-12/23 or IL-23 inhibitors, or a JAK inhibitor. The recommended course of action within each treatment category is not ranked in order of preference, but EULAR emphasizes the importance of following EMA recommendations and considering safety.
Systemic glucocorticoids removed
Certain medications have been removed from the recommendations, reflecting the heightened focus on treatment safety. The use of systemic glucocorticoids as adjunctive therapy is no longer recommended. “We always had reservations about their use, and now we have eliminated them. We are aware that they are still utilized, with 30% of patients in Germany, for instance, receiving low doses of glucocorticoids. However, the long-term efficacy/safety balance of glucocorticoids is unfavorable in any disease, particularly in patients with psoriatic arthritis and multiple comorbidities,” Dr. Gossec explained.
NSAIDs and local glucocorticoids are now limited to specific patient populations, namely those affected by oligoarthritis without poor prognostic factors, entheseal disease, or predominant axial disease. Their use should be short-term, generally no longer than 4 weeks. Polyarthritis or oligoarthritis with poor prognostic factors should instead be treated directly with csDMARDs.
No specific biologic treatment order recommended for peripheral arthritis
Regarding patients with peripheral arthritis, recent efficacy data have led EULAR to refrain from recommending any specific order of preference for the use of bDMARDs, which encompass TNF inhibitors and drugs targeting the IL-17 and IL-12/23 pathways. “We lack the data to propose an order of preference in patients with peripheral arthritis. Different classes of molecules exhibit efficacy in joint inflammation, generally resulting in a 50% response rate and similar overall effects,” said Dr. Gossec, referencing head-to-head trials between biologics that yielded very comparable results, such as the EXCEED trial or SPIRIT-H2H trial.
The updated recommendations now consider two IL-23p19 inhibitors, guselkumab (Tremfya) and risankizumab (Skyrizi), the JAK inhibitor upadacitinib (Rinvoq), and the very recently EMA-approved bimekizumab (Bimzelx), an IL-17A/F double inhibitor.
The recommendation for patients with mono- or oligoarthritis and poor prognostic factors now aligns with the previous recommendations for polyarthritis: A csDMARD should be initiated promptly, with a preference for methotrexate if significant skin involvement is present. New data suggest that methotrexate may be beneficial for enthesitis, achieving resolution in approximately 30% of patients. When considering treatment options, JAK inhibitors may also be taken into account, with safety considerations in mind.
In cases of clinically relevant axial disease and an inadequate response to NSAIDs, therapy with an IL-17A inhibitor, a TNF inhibitor, an IL-17A/F inhibitor, or a JAK inhibitor may be considered. This approach now aligns with the most recent axial spondyloarthritis recommendation from EULAR and the Assessment of SpondyloArthritis international Society (ASAS).
Which disease manifestation to treat first?
During the discussion, chairwoman Uta Kiltz, MD, PhD, a rheumatologist at Rheumatism Center Ruhrgebiet, Herne, Germany, and clinical lecturer at Ruhr University Bochum, inquired about identifying the primary manifestation to guide the course of action.
“Psoriatic arthritis is highly heterogeneous, and determining the predominant manifestation is sometimes challenging,” Dr. Gossec said. “However, we believe that a certain order of preference is necessary when making treatment decisions. Starting with peripheral arthritis, which can lead to structural damage, allows for treatment selection based on that aspect. If peripheral arthritis is not present, attention should be directed towards axial disease, ensuring the presence of actual inflammation rather than solely axial pain, as mechanical origin axial pain can occur due to the patient’s age.”
David Liew, MBBS, PhD, consultant rheumatologist and clinical pharmacologist at Austin Health in Melbourne, commented on the update to this news organization: “We are fortunate to have a wide range of targeted therapy options for psoriatic arthritis, and these guidelines reflect this abundance of choices. They emphasize the importance of selecting therapies based on specific disease manifestations and tailoring care to each patient’s unique type of psoriatic arthritis. It’s worth noting that some changes in these guidelines were influenced by regulatory changes following ORAL Surveillance. In an era of numerous options, we can afford to be selective at times.”
Regarding safety concerns and JAK inhibitors, Dr. Liew added: “It is not surprising to see these guidelines impose certain restrictions on the use of JAK inhibitors, especially in psoriatic arthritis, where other therapies offer distinct advantages. Until high-quality evidence convincingly points away from a class effect, we can expect to see similar provisions in many more guidelines.”
Many of the recommendations’ authors report financial relationships with one or more pharmaceutical companies. These include AbbVie, Amgen, Biogen, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Boehringer Ingelheim, Celgene, Celltrion, Chugai, Galapagos, Gilead, GlaxoSmithKline, Janssen, Leo, Lilly, Medac, Merck, Merck Sharp & Dohme, Novartis, Pfizer, R-Pharma, Regeneron, Roche, Sandoz, Sanofi, Takeda, UCB, and Viatris.
EULAR funded the development of the recommendations.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
AT EULAR 2023
MILAN – Safety considerations, particularly regarding the use of Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors, are of utmost importance in the 2023 update to recommendations for managing psoriatic arthritis (PsA) by the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology (EULAR). Additionally, the selection of therapy should now take into account the complete clinical presentation, explicitly considering nonmusculoskeletal manifestations.
Presenting the updated recommendations, Laure Gossec, MD, PhD, professor of rheumatology at Pitié-Salpétriere Hospital and Sorbonne University, Paris, emphasized an increasingly manifestation-oriented approach, integrating a growing range of available drugs in a stepwise manner to optimize the balance between safety and efficacy and achieve the highest quality of care. These updates were developed over the past 8 months, guided by a comprehensive review of drug efficacy based on 38 publications covering 18 drugs, as well as a safety review encompassing 24 publications.
Safety considerations with JAK inhibitors
Expanding on the existing six overarching principles from the 2019 recommendations, the PsA EULAR recommendations now introduce a seventh principle: “The choice of treatment should consider safety considerations regarding individual modes of action to optimize the benefit-risk profile.”
This addition was prompted by recent safety data on JAK inhibitors, which revealed serious potential side effects, such as heart attacks, blood clots, cancer, and severe infections, that recently prompted the European Medicines Agency to restrict their use. As indicated by the new principle, safety considerations have been incorporated into several recommendations.
For instance, in the context of peripheral arthritis, JAK inhibitors may now be considered if there is an inadequate response to at least one conventional synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (csDMARD) such as methotrexate, sulfasalazine, or leflunomide, and at least one biologic DMARD (bDMARD).
Alternatively, JAK inhibitors may be utilized when bDMARDs are not suitable for other reasons. However, EULAR now emphasizes caution whenever JAK inhibitors are mentioned. Specifically, “careful consideration is necessary for patients aged 65 or above, current or past long-time smokers, individuals with a history of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease or other cardiovascular risk factors, those with other malignancy risk factors, or individuals with a known risk for venous thromboembolism.”
Consider nonmusculoskeletal manifestations in treatment decisions
In another significant update, EULAR now recommends that the choice of therapy should also consider nonmusculoskeletal manifestations associated with PsA. “There is a notable shift in perspective here,” Dr. Gossec told this news organization. Clinically relevant skin involvement should prompt the use of IL-17A or IL-17A/F or IL-23 or IL-12/23 inhibitors, while uveitis should be treated with tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitors.
In the case of inflammatory bowel disease, EULAR advises the use of anti-TNF agents, IL-12/23 or IL-23 inhibitors, or a JAK inhibitor. The recommended course of action within each treatment category is not ranked in order of preference, but EULAR emphasizes the importance of following EMA recommendations and considering safety.
Systemic glucocorticoids removed
Certain medications have been removed from the recommendations, reflecting the heightened focus on treatment safety. The use of systemic glucocorticoids as adjunctive therapy is no longer recommended. “We always had reservations about their use, and now we have eliminated them. We are aware that they are still utilized, with 30% of patients in Germany, for instance, receiving low doses of glucocorticoids. However, the long-term efficacy/safety balance of glucocorticoids is unfavorable in any disease, particularly in patients with psoriatic arthritis and multiple comorbidities,” Dr. Gossec explained.
NSAIDs and local glucocorticoids are now limited to specific patient populations, namely those affected by oligoarthritis without poor prognostic factors, entheseal disease, or predominant axial disease. Their use should be short-term, generally no longer than 4 weeks. Polyarthritis or oligoarthritis with poor prognostic factors should instead be treated directly with csDMARDs.
No specific biologic treatment order recommended for peripheral arthritis
Regarding patients with peripheral arthritis, recent efficacy data have led EULAR to refrain from recommending any specific order of preference for the use of bDMARDs, which encompass TNF inhibitors and drugs targeting the IL-17 and IL-12/23 pathways. “We lack the data to propose an order of preference in patients with peripheral arthritis. Different classes of molecules exhibit efficacy in joint inflammation, generally resulting in a 50% response rate and similar overall effects,” said Dr. Gossec, referencing head-to-head trials between biologics that yielded very comparable results, such as the EXCEED trial or SPIRIT-H2H trial.
The updated recommendations now consider two IL-23p19 inhibitors, guselkumab (Tremfya) and risankizumab (Skyrizi), the JAK inhibitor upadacitinib (Rinvoq), and the very recently EMA-approved bimekizumab (Bimzelx), an IL-17A/F double inhibitor.
The recommendation for patients with mono- or oligoarthritis and poor prognostic factors now aligns with the previous recommendations for polyarthritis: A csDMARD should be initiated promptly, with a preference for methotrexate if significant skin involvement is present. New data suggest that methotrexate may be beneficial for enthesitis, achieving resolution in approximately 30% of patients. When considering treatment options, JAK inhibitors may also be taken into account, with safety considerations in mind.
In cases of clinically relevant axial disease and an inadequate response to NSAIDs, therapy with an IL-17A inhibitor, a TNF inhibitor, an IL-17A/F inhibitor, or a JAK inhibitor may be considered. This approach now aligns with the most recent axial spondyloarthritis recommendation from EULAR and the Assessment of SpondyloArthritis international Society (ASAS).
Which disease manifestation to treat first?
During the discussion, chairwoman Uta Kiltz, MD, PhD, a rheumatologist at Rheumatism Center Ruhrgebiet, Herne, Germany, and clinical lecturer at Ruhr University Bochum, inquired about identifying the primary manifestation to guide the course of action.
“Psoriatic arthritis is highly heterogeneous, and determining the predominant manifestation is sometimes challenging,” Dr. Gossec said. “However, we believe that a certain order of preference is necessary when making treatment decisions. Starting with peripheral arthritis, which can lead to structural damage, allows for treatment selection based on that aspect. If peripheral arthritis is not present, attention should be directed towards axial disease, ensuring the presence of actual inflammation rather than solely axial pain, as mechanical origin axial pain can occur due to the patient’s age.”
David Liew, MBBS, PhD, consultant rheumatologist and clinical pharmacologist at Austin Health in Melbourne, commented on the update to this news organization: “We are fortunate to have a wide range of targeted therapy options for psoriatic arthritis, and these guidelines reflect this abundance of choices. They emphasize the importance of selecting therapies based on specific disease manifestations and tailoring care to each patient’s unique type of psoriatic arthritis. It’s worth noting that some changes in these guidelines were influenced by regulatory changes following ORAL Surveillance. In an era of numerous options, we can afford to be selective at times.”
Regarding safety concerns and JAK inhibitors, Dr. Liew added: “It is not surprising to see these guidelines impose certain restrictions on the use of JAK inhibitors, especially in psoriatic arthritis, where other therapies offer distinct advantages. Until high-quality evidence convincingly points away from a class effect, we can expect to see similar provisions in many more guidelines.”
Many of the recommendations’ authors report financial relationships with one or more pharmaceutical companies. These include AbbVie, Amgen, Biogen, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Boehringer Ingelheim, Celgene, Celltrion, Chugai, Galapagos, Gilead, GlaxoSmithKline, Janssen, Leo, Lilly, Medac, Merck, Merck Sharp & Dohme, Novartis, Pfizer, R-Pharma, Regeneron, Roche, Sandoz, Sanofi, Takeda, UCB, and Viatris.
EULAR funded the development of the recommendations.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
EULAR systemic sclerosis recommendations now include immunosuppressants
MILAN – Targeted synthetic and biologic therapies are recommended as disease-modifying agents for key fibrotic manifestations of systemic sclerosis for the first time in the 2023 update of European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology recommendations for the treatment of systemic sclerosis.
Reflecting important advances over the past 8 years, mostly relating to the use of new treatments being made available to patients, the recommendations provide an update on the 2017 recommendations, which relied on evidence published through 2014. Of note, these include the use of immunosuppressive agents, for example, the monoclonal antibody rituximab (Rituxan) for skin and lung fibrosis.
“For the first time, synthetic and targeted treatments are recommended for the treatment of systemic sclerosis–interstitial lung disease, including mycophenolate mofetil [Cellcept], nintedanib [Ofev], rituximab, and tocilizumab [Actemra]. None of these were present in 2017. Mycophenolate mofetil is also recommended for the treatment of skin fibrosis, and this was not present in 2017,” Francesco Del Galdo, MD, rheumatology consultant at Leeds Teaching Hospital NHS Trust, Leeds, England, and member of the 2023 recommendations task force, said in an interview. He gave an overview of the preliminary recommendations at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology.
“Phosphodiesterase-5 [PDE-5] inhibitors and endothelin receptor antagonist [ERA] monotherapy are also recommended for up-front combination use for digital ulcers and pulmonary hypertension, and this is new for 2023 and was not present in the 2017 recommendations,” Dr. Del Galdo added.
The new recommendations also note that iloprost is categorized as having grade A evidence for use in Raynaud’s phenomenon and digital ulcers, while it has grade B evidence for pulmonary hypertension.
“We are not allowed to share the final table [of recommendations] today because the wording has only very recently been agreed” upon, Dr. Del Galdo said, but he provided a summary representation and reflected on some changes, noting that the task force is aiming to publish the 2023 recommendations by the end of the year.
Consideration and discussion of both established and new evidence highlighted a need for more evidence on the use of immunosuppressive agents in vascular manifestations of systemic sclerosis, as well as for gastrointestinal and musculoskeletal ones.
In this update to the 2017 recommendations, high-grade evidence was identified for use of immunosuppressants in skin and lung fibrosis. Grade A evidence has been accepted for the use of rituximab in skin fibrosis; for interstitial lung disease, rituximab, cyclophosphamide, and nintedanib also have grade A evidence, which is a change from the 2017 recommendations.
A total of 20 updated recommendations were agreed on, an increase from 16 in 2017. These were grouped into eight disease domains: Raynaud’s phenomenon, digital ulcers, pulmonary arterial hypertension, skin fibrosis, interstitial lung disease, musculoskeletal and gastrointestinal manifestations, and renal crisis. Interventions were then graded A-D based on the evidence reviewed.
“This approach allowed us to see clearly that there were patterns of similar recommendations in different organ manifestations, reflecting an understanding of common pathogenic pathways,” said Dr. Del Galdo.
He also noted that the development of the recommendations highlighted certain gaps in research that limit treatment options. “By grouping the recommendations in blocks – for example, skin fibrosis or vascular [manifestations] – we show that immunosuppressive treatments have only been studied in skin and lung, while vascular manifestations have very little evidence for immunosuppression. They might be effective but there’s no evidence yet [hence no recommendation in vascular manifestations].”
“Also, there’s no grade A evidence at all for musculoskeletal and gastrointestinal manifestations, and this should help to define the research agenda going forward,” Dr. Del Galdo said.
The 2023 recommendations task force comprised 28 members from 14 countries, including 18 rheumatologists, 1 EULAR methodologist, 1 health professional representative, 5 rheumatology fellows, 1 librarian, and 2 patient representatives. They used a consensual approach incorporating the views of 101 European Scleroderma Trials and Research group (EUSTAR) centers, sourced via a survey in which questions were advanced to an extensive systematic review if there was 70% or greater agreement.
Eventually, 31 questions on interventions were chosen, and the task force reviewed 12,500 abstracts (up to December 2022) related to interventions and outcomes that were either included in the 2017 recommendations or were totally new.
Dr. Del Galdo said that the three vascular manifestations of scleroderma – Raynaud’s, pulmonary arterial hypertension, and digital ulcers – were treated with the same drugs, all with a similar grade of evidence. “This suggests two things – firstly there’s a vascular disease continuum in the disease, and secondly, we’ve borrowed these drugs from vascular community, but we have not yet tested synthetic and biologic targeted treatments in these manifestations, and we should.
“Treating one manifestation may benefit the other, and this is important time wise because pulmonary hypertension usually comes around 10 years after the first phenomena so by treating digital ulcers and Raynaud’s phenomena, we may prevent pulmonary hypertension, but a study is needed,” added Dr. Del Galdo, who is also president of EUSTAR.
Finally, he pointed out that research remains particularly open for nonpharmacologic treatments for digital ulcers and severe gastrointestinal involvement. “Patients can now ask for studies into this because of the current lack of evidence.”
Moderator Ariane Herrick, PhD, professor of rheumatology at the University of Manchester (England), shared her thoughts on the guidelines. “These recommendations have been long awaited by the scleroderma community because there has been some exciting progress in recent years, and the new recommendations reflect these new developments.”
Commenting on the paucity of evidence in some areas, she added that “there do remain some huge areas of unmet need that are difficult to address, and these are musculoskeletal, gastrointestinal, and calcinosis, for which there have been no trials at all.”
Dr. Del Galdo declared disclosures relating to AstraZeneca, Janssen, Boehringer Ingelheim, Capella, Chemomab, GlaxoSmithKline, and Mitsubishi-Tanabe. Dr. Herrick disclosed serving as a consultant for Boehringer Ingelheim and Janssen.
MILAN – Targeted synthetic and biologic therapies are recommended as disease-modifying agents for key fibrotic manifestations of systemic sclerosis for the first time in the 2023 update of European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology recommendations for the treatment of systemic sclerosis.
Reflecting important advances over the past 8 years, mostly relating to the use of new treatments being made available to patients, the recommendations provide an update on the 2017 recommendations, which relied on evidence published through 2014. Of note, these include the use of immunosuppressive agents, for example, the monoclonal antibody rituximab (Rituxan) for skin and lung fibrosis.
“For the first time, synthetic and targeted treatments are recommended for the treatment of systemic sclerosis–interstitial lung disease, including mycophenolate mofetil [Cellcept], nintedanib [Ofev], rituximab, and tocilizumab [Actemra]. None of these were present in 2017. Mycophenolate mofetil is also recommended for the treatment of skin fibrosis, and this was not present in 2017,” Francesco Del Galdo, MD, rheumatology consultant at Leeds Teaching Hospital NHS Trust, Leeds, England, and member of the 2023 recommendations task force, said in an interview. He gave an overview of the preliminary recommendations at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology.
“Phosphodiesterase-5 [PDE-5] inhibitors and endothelin receptor antagonist [ERA] monotherapy are also recommended for up-front combination use for digital ulcers and pulmonary hypertension, and this is new for 2023 and was not present in the 2017 recommendations,” Dr. Del Galdo added.
The new recommendations also note that iloprost is categorized as having grade A evidence for use in Raynaud’s phenomenon and digital ulcers, while it has grade B evidence for pulmonary hypertension.
“We are not allowed to share the final table [of recommendations] today because the wording has only very recently been agreed” upon, Dr. Del Galdo said, but he provided a summary representation and reflected on some changes, noting that the task force is aiming to publish the 2023 recommendations by the end of the year.
Consideration and discussion of both established and new evidence highlighted a need for more evidence on the use of immunosuppressive agents in vascular manifestations of systemic sclerosis, as well as for gastrointestinal and musculoskeletal ones.
In this update to the 2017 recommendations, high-grade evidence was identified for use of immunosuppressants in skin and lung fibrosis. Grade A evidence has been accepted for the use of rituximab in skin fibrosis; for interstitial lung disease, rituximab, cyclophosphamide, and nintedanib also have grade A evidence, which is a change from the 2017 recommendations.
A total of 20 updated recommendations were agreed on, an increase from 16 in 2017. These were grouped into eight disease domains: Raynaud’s phenomenon, digital ulcers, pulmonary arterial hypertension, skin fibrosis, interstitial lung disease, musculoskeletal and gastrointestinal manifestations, and renal crisis. Interventions were then graded A-D based on the evidence reviewed.
“This approach allowed us to see clearly that there were patterns of similar recommendations in different organ manifestations, reflecting an understanding of common pathogenic pathways,” said Dr. Del Galdo.
He also noted that the development of the recommendations highlighted certain gaps in research that limit treatment options. “By grouping the recommendations in blocks – for example, skin fibrosis or vascular [manifestations] – we show that immunosuppressive treatments have only been studied in skin and lung, while vascular manifestations have very little evidence for immunosuppression. They might be effective but there’s no evidence yet [hence no recommendation in vascular manifestations].”
“Also, there’s no grade A evidence at all for musculoskeletal and gastrointestinal manifestations, and this should help to define the research agenda going forward,” Dr. Del Galdo said.
The 2023 recommendations task force comprised 28 members from 14 countries, including 18 rheumatologists, 1 EULAR methodologist, 1 health professional representative, 5 rheumatology fellows, 1 librarian, and 2 patient representatives. They used a consensual approach incorporating the views of 101 European Scleroderma Trials and Research group (EUSTAR) centers, sourced via a survey in which questions were advanced to an extensive systematic review if there was 70% or greater agreement.
Eventually, 31 questions on interventions were chosen, and the task force reviewed 12,500 abstracts (up to December 2022) related to interventions and outcomes that were either included in the 2017 recommendations or were totally new.
Dr. Del Galdo said that the three vascular manifestations of scleroderma – Raynaud’s, pulmonary arterial hypertension, and digital ulcers – were treated with the same drugs, all with a similar grade of evidence. “This suggests two things – firstly there’s a vascular disease continuum in the disease, and secondly, we’ve borrowed these drugs from vascular community, but we have not yet tested synthetic and biologic targeted treatments in these manifestations, and we should.
“Treating one manifestation may benefit the other, and this is important time wise because pulmonary hypertension usually comes around 10 years after the first phenomena so by treating digital ulcers and Raynaud’s phenomena, we may prevent pulmonary hypertension, but a study is needed,” added Dr. Del Galdo, who is also president of EUSTAR.
Finally, he pointed out that research remains particularly open for nonpharmacologic treatments for digital ulcers and severe gastrointestinal involvement. “Patients can now ask for studies into this because of the current lack of evidence.”
Moderator Ariane Herrick, PhD, professor of rheumatology at the University of Manchester (England), shared her thoughts on the guidelines. “These recommendations have been long awaited by the scleroderma community because there has been some exciting progress in recent years, and the new recommendations reflect these new developments.”
Commenting on the paucity of evidence in some areas, she added that “there do remain some huge areas of unmet need that are difficult to address, and these are musculoskeletal, gastrointestinal, and calcinosis, for which there have been no trials at all.”
Dr. Del Galdo declared disclosures relating to AstraZeneca, Janssen, Boehringer Ingelheim, Capella, Chemomab, GlaxoSmithKline, and Mitsubishi-Tanabe. Dr. Herrick disclosed serving as a consultant for Boehringer Ingelheim and Janssen.
MILAN – Targeted synthetic and biologic therapies are recommended as disease-modifying agents for key fibrotic manifestations of systemic sclerosis for the first time in the 2023 update of European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology recommendations for the treatment of systemic sclerosis.
Reflecting important advances over the past 8 years, mostly relating to the use of new treatments being made available to patients, the recommendations provide an update on the 2017 recommendations, which relied on evidence published through 2014. Of note, these include the use of immunosuppressive agents, for example, the monoclonal antibody rituximab (Rituxan) for skin and lung fibrosis.
“For the first time, synthetic and targeted treatments are recommended for the treatment of systemic sclerosis–interstitial lung disease, including mycophenolate mofetil [Cellcept], nintedanib [Ofev], rituximab, and tocilizumab [Actemra]. None of these were present in 2017. Mycophenolate mofetil is also recommended for the treatment of skin fibrosis, and this was not present in 2017,” Francesco Del Galdo, MD, rheumatology consultant at Leeds Teaching Hospital NHS Trust, Leeds, England, and member of the 2023 recommendations task force, said in an interview. He gave an overview of the preliminary recommendations at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology.
“Phosphodiesterase-5 [PDE-5] inhibitors and endothelin receptor antagonist [ERA] monotherapy are also recommended for up-front combination use for digital ulcers and pulmonary hypertension, and this is new for 2023 and was not present in the 2017 recommendations,” Dr. Del Galdo added.
The new recommendations also note that iloprost is categorized as having grade A evidence for use in Raynaud’s phenomenon and digital ulcers, while it has grade B evidence for pulmonary hypertension.
“We are not allowed to share the final table [of recommendations] today because the wording has only very recently been agreed” upon, Dr. Del Galdo said, but he provided a summary representation and reflected on some changes, noting that the task force is aiming to publish the 2023 recommendations by the end of the year.
Consideration and discussion of both established and new evidence highlighted a need for more evidence on the use of immunosuppressive agents in vascular manifestations of systemic sclerosis, as well as for gastrointestinal and musculoskeletal ones.
In this update to the 2017 recommendations, high-grade evidence was identified for use of immunosuppressants in skin and lung fibrosis. Grade A evidence has been accepted for the use of rituximab in skin fibrosis; for interstitial lung disease, rituximab, cyclophosphamide, and nintedanib also have grade A evidence, which is a change from the 2017 recommendations.
A total of 20 updated recommendations were agreed on, an increase from 16 in 2017. These were grouped into eight disease domains: Raynaud’s phenomenon, digital ulcers, pulmonary arterial hypertension, skin fibrosis, interstitial lung disease, musculoskeletal and gastrointestinal manifestations, and renal crisis. Interventions were then graded A-D based on the evidence reviewed.
“This approach allowed us to see clearly that there were patterns of similar recommendations in different organ manifestations, reflecting an understanding of common pathogenic pathways,” said Dr. Del Galdo.
He also noted that the development of the recommendations highlighted certain gaps in research that limit treatment options. “By grouping the recommendations in blocks – for example, skin fibrosis or vascular [manifestations] – we show that immunosuppressive treatments have only been studied in skin and lung, while vascular manifestations have very little evidence for immunosuppression. They might be effective but there’s no evidence yet [hence no recommendation in vascular manifestations].”
“Also, there’s no grade A evidence at all for musculoskeletal and gastrointestinal manifestations, and this should help to define the research agenda going forward,” Dr. Del Galdo said.
The 2023 recommendations task force comprised 28 members from 14 countries, including 18 rheumatologists, 1 EULAR methodologist, 1 health professional representative, 5 rheumatology fellows, 1 librarian, and 2 patient representatives. They used a consensual approach incorporating the views of 101 European Scleroderma Trials and Research group (EUSTAR) centers, sourced via a survey in which questions were advanced to an extensive systematic review if there was 70% or greater agreement.
Eventually, 31 questions on interventions were chosen, and the task force reviewed 12,500 abstracts (up to December 2022) related to interventions and outcomes that were either included in the 2017 recommendations or were totally new.
Dr. Del Galdo said that the three vascular manifestations of scleroderma – Raynaud’s, pulmonary arterial hypertension, and digital ulcers – were treated with the same drugs, all with a similar grade of evidence. “This suggests two things – firstly there’s a vascular disease continuum in the disease, and secondly, we’ve borrowed these drugs from vascular community, but we have not yet tested synthetic and biologic targeted treatments in these manifestations, and we should.
“Treating one manifestation may benefit the other, and this is important time wise because pulmonary hypertension usually comes around 10 years after the first phenomena so by treating digital ulcers and Raynaud’s phenomena, we may prevent pulmonary hypertension, but a study is needed,” added Dr. Del Galdo, who is also president of EUSTAR.
Finally, he pointed out that research remains particularly open for nonpharmacologic treatments for digital ulcers and severe gastrointestinal involvement. “Patients can now ask for studies into this because of the current lack of evidence.”
Moderator Ariane Herrick, PhD, professor of rheumatology at the University of Manchester (England), shared her thoughts on the guidelines. “These recommendations have been long awaited by the scleroderma community because there has been some exciting progress in recent years, and the new recommendations reflect these new developments.”
Commenting on the paucity of evidence in some areas, she added that “there do remain some huge areas of unmet need that are difficult to address, and these are musculoskeletal, gastrointestinal, and calcinosis, for which there have been no trials at all.”
Dr. Del Galdo declared disclosures relating to AstraZeneca, Janssen, Boehringer Ingelheim, Capella, Chemomab, GlaxoSmithKline, and Mitsubishi-Tanabe. Dr. Herrick disclosed serving as a consultant for Boehringer Ingelheim and Janssen.
AT EULAR 2023