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Rheumatology

Rheumatology

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

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What are specific treatment considerations for dactylitis- or enthesitis-predominant AxSpa/PsA?

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Rheumatology · Mayo Clinic Jacksonville

Treating these manifestations of peripheral SpA is challenging. It is always important to have a baseline assessment of the liver and kidney function as well as other relevant labs prior to starting therapeutic treatments. In addition, careful assessment and consideration to comorbidities should be ...

How useful are anti-ribosomal P antibodies in the evaluation for SLE psychosis?

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Rheumatology · Medical College of Wisconsin Affiliated Hospitals

I do not think they are very useful at all. This may be a controversial opinion, but I think they should be largely retired from clinical practice. Though somewhat dated, an excellent meta analysis (Karassa et al., PMID 16385548) on this question concluded the following: "This meta-analysis demonstr...

Is there evidence that either ASDAS or BASDAI is superior for measuring clinical outcomes in axial spondyloarthritis?

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Rheumatology · University of Wisconsin Madison

BASDAI and ASDAS are validated measures of AS disease activity and are used simultaneously in clinical trials. BASDAI (Bath Ankylosing Spondylitis Disease Activity Index)1 exhibits good reliability, sensitivity to change in response to intervention, has 6 questions (fatigue, back pain/hip pain, peri...

Is a comprehensive physical exam with vital signs warranted for routine follow-up visits in well-controlled uncomplicated RA patients?

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Rheumatology · MD Anderson Cancer Center

This is an important question for which we don't have an evidence-based answer yet, but it is likely that our practice will change with these new guidelines, and with the expansion of telemedicine. I think we cannot have a one size fits all recommendation. Many factors may influence the need for a f...

Is there a role for measuring hydroxychloroquine blood levels in clinical practice?

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Rheumatology · Harvard

This is being actively investigated by a number of groups around the world, with no final consensus, but the groups in France have studied this the longest, and published the most, to date. The major outcome has been that some (quite a few) patients had very low levels, who admitted on careful quest...

Would you use an IL-17 inhibitor for a psoriatic arthritis patient with inactive inflammatory bowel disease?

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Rheumatology · Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine

It depends on the options. While I would generally avoid using an IL-17 inhibitor in a patient with a h/o IBD, if there are no other reasonable treatment alternatives, and the IBD has been inactive for a significant period of time (a year?), then I would consider it, after a full discussion of the r...

How does a history of splenectomy alter how you counsel patients on the infection risk of TNF inhibitors or other biologics?

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Rheumatology · Harvard Medical School

In general, a history of splenectomy would lead to an increased concern regarding infections with parasitemia and encapsulated organisms (particularly Strep. pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae type b, and Neisseria meningitides). However, I would not consider prior splenectomy an absolute contraindi...

Is nailfold capillaroscopy useful for prognostication and evaluation of disease progression in scleroderma patients?

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Rheumatology · Vanderbilt University Medical School

Nailfold capillaroscopy is most commonly used for diagnostic purposes in patients with Raynaud's phenomenon (RP), but is also useful for prognostication and evaluation of disease progression in systemic sclerosis (SSc) patients.Nailfold capillaroscopy examines the terminal row of capillaries at the ...

Is nailfold capillaroscopy useful for prognostication and evaluation of disease progression in MCTD/myositis patients?

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Rheumatology · Emory University

Great question for clinicians: Nailfold capillaroscopy is useful for several systemic autoimmune diseases and, not surprisingly, multiple studies have documented frequent nailfold capillary abnormalities in patients with multiple types of autoimmune myositis, including dermatomyositis (DM), anti-syn...

How do you approach a patient found to have a coronary lesion suggestive of vasculitis on coronary CT?

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Rheumatology · Director, Vasculitis Clinical Research Consortium

I am not sure what findings are considered “suggestive of vasculitis on coronary CT”. Vasculitis in the coronary arteries is quite rare but can be seen in several vasculitides. There is a big difference in seeing angiographic changes atypical for atherosclerosis (which I assume is what is meant by t...