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* For Best Viewing: Open in Slide Show Mode Click on icon or From the View menu, select the Slide Show option * To help you as you prepare a talk, we have included the relevant text from ITC in the notes pages of each slide © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. Terms of Use The In the Clinic® slide sets are owned and copyrighted by the American College of Physicians (ACP). All text, graphics, trademarks, and other intellectual property incorporated into the slide sets remain the sole and exclusive property of ACP. The slide sets may be used only by the person who downloads or purchases them and only for the purpose of presenting them during not-forprofit educational activities. Users may incorporate the entire slide set or selected individual slides into their own teaching presentations but may not alter the content of the slides in any way or remove the ACP copyright notice. Users may make print copies for use as hand-outs for the audience the user is personally addressing but may not otherwise reproduce or distribute the slides by any means or media, including but not limited to sending them as e-mail attachments, posting them on Internet or Intranet sites, publishing them in meeting proceedings, or making them available for sale or distribution in any unauthorized form, without the express written permission of the ACP. Unauthorized use of the In the Clinic slide sets constitutes copyright infringement. © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. in the clinic Systemic Lupus Erythematosus © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. Which patients are at elevated risk for lupus? Diagnosed 9-times more often in women than men More common and severe in women who are African American, Hispanic, other ethnic minorities Early studies suggest genetic predisposition HLA genes + early complement components Single-gene risk factors account for just 1-2% of cases >30 gene polymorphisms linked to lupus Possible contributors in those genetically predisposed Sex chromosome genes, sex hormones Environmental influences © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. Should clinicians screen patients for asymptomatic lupus if they are at increased risk? Not recommended Including those with a family history Test for ANA produces too many false-positives Detected in 3-5% of healthy individuals or patients with other autoimmune or infectious diseases Serologic evidence may precede clinical manifestations By 3 to 9 years Treating during this clinically ‘silent’ period doesn’t halt or delay development © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. CLINICAL BOTTOM LINE: Screening… Single-gene mutations causing SLE are rare Numerous gene variants are linked to lupus Current evidence insufficient to support screening for them ANA testing in asymptomatic individuals is not useful Immune reaction to nuclear antigens is not SLE-specific Can be detected in healthy individuals May precede SLE manifestations by many years © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. What symptoms or physical exam findings should prompt clinicians to consider lupus? Weight loss, fatigue, low-grade fever Initial presentation often mimics a viral syndrome Arthralgias or arthritis Morning stiffness, mild-to-moderate joint swelling Non-erosive, affecting lg / sm joints; infrequent deformities Jaccoud’s arthropathy present in 2.8-4.3% Cutaneous manifestations (occur in up to 70%) Acute: indurated or flat erythematous lesions Subacute: annular lesions coalescing into polycyclic rash or papulosquamous lesions Chronic: scarring indurated plaques that resolve with depigmentation (discoid lupus) © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. What other clinical manifestations should clinicians look for when evaluating people who may have lupus? Lupus is a multi-organ disease May present in many ways Can mimic infectious diseases, cancer, autoimmune conditions ACR classification criteria facilitates systematic approach Focuses on the most common SLE manifestations 4 of the 11 criteria required for classification Highly sensitive + specific for diagnosing SLE But patients with mild disease may be missed © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. Malar rash: flat or raised erythema over malar eminences Discoid rash: erythematous raised patches or atrophic scarring Photosensitivity: skin rash from unusual reaction to sunlight Oral ulcers: usually painless oral / nasopharyngeal ulcerations Arthritis: nonerosive, involving ≥2 or more peripheral joints Serositis: pleuritis or documented pericarditis Renal disorder: persistent proteinuria >0.5 g/d or >3 (dipstick); cellular casts red cell, hgb, granular, tubular, or mixed Neurologic disorder: seizures or psychosis Hematologic disorder: hemolytic anemia with reticulocytosis; leukopenia <4000/mm ≥2 occasions; lymphopenia <1500/mm ≥2 or more occasions; thrombocytopenia <100 000/mm Immunologic disorder: anti-dsDNA; anti-Smith antibodies; antiphospholipid antibodies ANA: in absence of drugs associated with drug-induced SLE © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. What laboratory tests should clinicians use to diagnose lupus? ANA Negative ANA inconsistent with diagnosis of SLE If positive, test for antigen-specific ANAs Those targeting dsDNA or ribonucleoprotein complexes Ro/SSA, La/SSB Smith, RNP (extractable nuclear antigens) Basic investigations for SLE Complement C3 and C4 CBC, ESR, CRP, comprehensive metabolic panel Urinalysis Direct Coombs’ test (if hemolytic anemia + reticulocytosis) Creatine phosphokinase (if muscle weakness) © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. What other diagnoses should clinicians consider in patients with possible lupus? Chronic fatigue syndrome Fibromyalgia Rheumatoid arthritis Small or medium vessel vasculitides Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura Viral arthritis Hematopoietic cancer Malignant lymphoproliferative syndromes © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. When should clinicians consult with a rheumatologist or other specialist for diagnosing patients with possible lupus? All patients When manifestations and serologic studies suggest SLE Goals Timely, accurate diagnosis Effective treatment of acute disease Appropriate monitoring and dose adjustment Early introduction of a steroid-sparing regimen © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. CLINICAL BOTTOM LINE: Diagnosis… Lupus often a diagnostic challenge Multisystem (cutaneous, renal, respiratory, CV, CNS, GI) Manifestations may characterize numerous other conditions Use ACR classification criteria as a guide © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. What medications are used to treat lupus? Glucocorticoids First-line agents for most manifestations Dosage and duration based on clinical experience Antimalarials Hydroxychloroquine: cornerstone of SLE treatment To prevent disease flares NSAIDs Immunosuppressive treatment In lupus nephritis: based on histopathologic classifications Other manifestations: treatment often includes immunosuppressives and a multidisciplinary approach © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. How should clinicians initiate therapy in a stable patient who is not having a flare? Hydroxychloroquine and other antimalarials Used to treat inflammatory arthritides for >50 years Prevents relapses Reduces risk for congenital heart block in neonatal SLE Antithrombotic effects are important in antiphospholipid antibody-related prothrombotic diathesis Well-tolerated with rare side effects (retinopathy; skin hyperpigmentation; neuromuscular or cardiac toxicity) © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. How should clinicians choose therapy for a patient who is having a flare? IV glucocorticoids + immunosuppressive medications For severe manifestations (lupus nephritis, alveolar hemorrhage, CNS vasculitis) Withdraw glucocorticoids once remission achieved Oral prednisone or methlyprednisolone For arthritis, pleuropericarditis, cutaneous vasculitis, uveitis Overlap: lupus manifestations, glucocorticoid complications Osteoporosis, avascular bone necrosis, myopathy, psychosis Glucocorticoid dosage, duration: rely on clinical experience Prolonged medium-to-high dosing increases complications © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. How should clinicians choose drug therapy for cutaneous manifestations? Commonly used topical treatments Tacrolimus, R-salbutamol, or pimecrolimus Clobetasol Betamethasone Photoprotection Other treatments Systemic hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine Methotrexate Mycophenolate mofetil Azathioprine Rituximab © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. How should clinicians choose drug therapy for arthritis? First-line agents Low-dose glucocorticoids Antimalarials Other treatment Methotrexate (particularly in patients without other systemic manifestations) © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. How should clinicians choose and dose drug therapy for lupus nephritis? Class I or II: no immunosuppressive therapy Class III or IV: treat aggressively Standard therapy: cyclophosphamide + IV glucocorticoids Dose cyclophosphamide by total body surface area, adjusted for decreased creatinine clearance Dose glucocorticoids using ACR recommendations Newer regimen: mycophenolate mofetil + glucocorticoids GI and hematologic toxicity common Contraindicated in pregnancy (possibly teratogenic) Class V: prednisone 0.5 mg/kg/d + mycophenolate mofetil Class VI: preparation for renal replacement therapy © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. Maintenance therapy Mycophenolate mofetil Azathioprine Both superior to cyclophosphamide For patients who don’t respond to either Calcineurin inhibitors (cyclosporine, tacrolimus) Rituximab (monoclonal antibody against CD20) Either in combination with glucocorticoids © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. Indications for kidney biopsy in SLE Increasing serum creatinine Without compelling alternative causes Confirmed proteinuria ≥1.0gm per 24h 24-h urine specimens or spot protein/creatinine ratio Combination of the following: Proteinuria ≥0.5 gm per 24h + hematuria (≥5 RBCs/highpower field) or Proteinuria ≥0.5 gm per 24h + cellular casts © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. How should clinicians choose drug therapy for membranous nephritis? Pure membranous nephritis not associated with endocapillary proliferation Presents with variable degree of proteinuria Progression of renal dysfunction slow compared to class III or IV lupus nephritis Treat with mycophenolate mofetil + steroids Tacrolimus / azathioprine + steroids also effective © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. How should clinicians choose therapy for neuropsychiatric lupus? Treatment relatively empirical IV glucocorticoids, immunoglobulin, cyclophosphamide Relapse may be more common in glucocorticoid vs cyclophosphamide treatment Rituximab may be beneficial, but relapse rate seems high © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. How should clinicians choose therapy for respiratory manifestations? Pleuritis NSAIDs, low- to moderate-dose glucocorticoids Abrupt diffuse alveolar hemorrhage IV glucocorticoids + immunosupressants; consider plasmapheresis Pulmonary hypertension PDE-5 inhibitors, ERAs, and prostacyclin analogs may be used; with or without immunosuppressants In interstitial lung disease: glucocorticoids, and, if poor response, cyclophosphamide or azathioprine Acute lupus pneumonitis High doses of glucocorticoids and cyclophosphamide © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. How should clinicians choose therapy for ocular manifestations? Depends on severity and disease activity Antimalarials NSAIDs Oral or IV glucocorticoids Scleral or retinal involvement Concomitant use of pulse glucocorticoids Then 1 mg/kg prednisone equivalent + immunosuppressants Retinal vasculitis and arterial or venous retinal occlusion with antiphospholipid antibodies Immunosuppressants + antiplatelet agents / anticoagulation © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. What new medications are available for treating systemic lupus? Belimumab (1 mg/kg and 10 mg/kg dose) Monoclonal antibody targeting B lymphocyte stimulator Recently approved for treatment Improves musculoskeletal, mucocutaneous manifestations Improves immunological parameters Fewer patients had worsening hematological parameters Trials excluded patients with severe lupus nephritis or severe CNS manifestations © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. How should clinicians monitor patients who are being treated for lupus? Routinely test: CBC, basic metabolic panel, urinalysis Allows evaluation of target-organ manifestations Routinely test?: dsDNA antibodies + C3 & C4 levels Controversial for clinically stable patients Treatment with prednisone of clinically stable but serologically active patients may avert severe flare Monitor individual disease manifestations Monitor for immunosuppressant toxicity If treated with hydroxychloroquine: ophthalmological evaluation (particularly if >40y and treated for a long time) Monitor for osteoporosis, osteonecrosis Consider periodic lipid testing, ECHO © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. What should clinicians do about immunizations in people with lupus? All patients with SLE should receive Influenza vaccine Pneumococcal vaccine Consider quadrivalent HPV vaccine Well-tolerated, reasonably effective in stable SLE No live attenuated vaccines if immunocompromised If on >20mg/d prednisone or immunosuppressants Including: herpes zoster, Flumist, MMR, smallpox Tuberculin skin test recommended If glucocorticoids or immunosuppressive use prolonged © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. How should clinicians modify treatment for pregnant patients? Higher flare rate in pregnancy + immediate post-partum Initial presentation with hematologic or renal manifestations during pregnancy not uncommon Consider pregnancy-related abnormalities that mimic SLE (eclampsia, HELLP syndrome) Treat active lupus manifestations Use hydroxychloroquine and prednisone Discontinuation associated with increased flare risk If severe, consider IV glucocorticoids + azathioprine Contraindicated: mycophenolate mofetil, methotrexate, cyclophosphamide © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. When should patients with lupus be hospitalized? Severe thrombocytopenia Severe or rapidly progressive renal disease Suspected lupus pneumonitis or pulmonary hemorrhage Chest pain or severe cardiovascular manifestations CNS and neurological manifestations Unexplained fever © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. When should clinicians consider consulting a rheumatologist or other specialist for treating patients with lupus? Rheumatologist Should be involved in the treatment of all lupus patients Other specialists also may be involved Depending on organ-specific disease manifestations © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. What non-drug therapies should clinicians recommend for lupus? Low cholesterol diet Exercise Weight control Smoking cessation UV protection (to reduce flares from sun exposure) Calcium and vitamin D (to prevent osteoporosis) Routine dental evaluation © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1. CLINICAL BOTTOM LINE: Treatment… Hydroxychloroquine Prevents disease flares Cornerstone of SLE treatment Glucocorticoids First-line for most SLE manifestations Dose & duration based on clinical experience, consensus Immunosuppressive treatment in lupus nephritis Based on histopathologic classification Guided by ACR recommendations Treatment of other lupus manifestations Based on clinical experience Often immunosuppressive Rx + multidisciplinary approach © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012 Ann Int Med. 157 (3): ITC2-1.