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Rheumatology

Rheumatology

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

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What is your algorithm for transitioning a patient with chronic noninfectious posterior uveitis from corticosteroids to immunosuppressive therapy?

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Ophthalmology · Tennessee Retina Pc

There are some forms of noninfectious posterior/panuveitis where it is known from the time of uveitis diagnosis that steroid-sparing immunosuppression (IMT) will be needed. For example, in birdshot retinochoroiditis or serpiginous choroidopathy, IMT is often initiated in concert with oral corticoste...

In which Sjogren's patients do you prioritize systemic treatment strategies at time of diagnosis?

2 Answers

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Rheumatology · University of Kansas Medical Center

Answering this question would really depend on what exact type of patient you are dealing with. You may consider initiating oral DMARDs such as hydroxychloroquine, methotrexate, or azathioprine for patients with inflammatory arthropathy or significant autoimmune rashes. More aggressive therapy would...

Are there clinical, laboratory, or imaging features that can help distinguish primary Sjögren’s syndrome from secondary Sjögren’s in patients with overlapping inflammatory arthritis or positive rheumatoid factor?

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Rheumatology · University of California, Berkeley and San Francisco

Such a good query. I don't really know, as associated SjD has been understudied. In my experience, associated Sjogren's does not look that different from Sjogren's alone. We have seen high ocular staining scores and markedly reduced unstimulated salivary flow in associated SjD (SLE, RA). In SjD, the...

In a patient with high +SSA antibodies and distal renal tubular acidosis (RTA), but without sicca symptoms or other systemic features of Sjogren's, should immunomodulatory therapy with hydroxychloroquine or azathioprine be considered in an effort to reduce subclinical tubular inflammation and prevent progression of renal disease?

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

Renal disease can occur as an initial manifestation in the absence of sicca in SjÓ§gren’s disease (SjD) patients (Goules et al., PMID 31464673). This is important to realize for other systemic manifestations of SjD (e.g., cystic lung disease, tubulointerstitial nephritis, radiographic nephrocalcino...

Do you view the difference between oral and sublingual cyclobenzaprine as clinically significant? 

3 Answers

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Rheumatology · Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

Yes. Oral cyclobenzaprine—a TCA analogue structurally identical to amitriptyline aside from a single double bond—has been used off-label for fibromyalgia for many years. Despite long-standing anecdotal benefit, a prospective placebo-controlled RCT showed only transient improvement at 4 weeks, with n...

Do you recommend checking anti-drug antibodies for patients on TNF inhibitors?

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Rheumatology · NYU Grossman School of Medicine

This is a very good question with direct clinical practice implications. I do not check or follow anti-drug antibodies when using TNF inhibitors for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis or psoriatic arthritis. There are reports that suggest, on a group level, that these antibodies, if present, impa...

How do you approach the management of a patient with psoriasis and chronic anterior uveitis who is unable to take DMARDs and has tried TNF inhibitors and IL-17 inhibitors but has ongoing bilateral anterior uveitis?

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Rheumatology · Legacy Devers Eye Institute

Psoriasis is so common that it is possible that this is a chance association, but published studies do support the likelihood that there is a causal association between psoriasis and uveitis and a much stronger association between psoriatic arthritis and uveitis. The choice of therapy depends to a g...

How often do you monitor urine protein levels for patients with membranous nephropathy for whom you initiate obinutuzumab?

3 Answers

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Nephrology · Johns Hopkins University

Most studies of obinutuzumab in membranous nephropathy are retrospective, with remission rates of up to 83%. Would monitor UPCR every 1-3 months and check PLA2R every 3 months. Immunological remission (negative PLA2R) precedes clinical remission (one study with 76% at 3 mo and 80% at 6 mo), and clin...

How would you approach using the new vagus nerve stimulator for patients with RA?

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Rheumatology · Harvard Medical School

Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) may be a consideration for treating those patients with RA who have disease that is either resistant to multiple DMARDs and biological therapies, or where the risk of immune suppression significantly outweighs the potential benefits of our standard approach to managing ...

How do you approach management of rheumatoid vasculitis (in this era)?

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Rheumatology · Harvard Medical School

We don't see rheumatoid vasculitis very often nowadays. When our drug options for RA were limited, most patients had smoldering ongoing disease, which predisposed them to the possible development of a rheumatoid arthritis related vasculitis, though even then, cases were uncommon. Nowadays, our abili...