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BOSTON – Treat to target in both early and established rheumatoid arthritis, recommended the authors of American College of Rheumatology draft guidelines on the management of RA.
The new ACR guidelines, expected to be finalized and published by the spring of 2015, also focus on the care of those patients whom most rheumatologists see in day-to-day practice, and they call for patience when trying a new therapy or new dose of an existing drug, Dr. Jasvinder Singh, of the division of clinical immunology and rheumatology at the University of Alabama, Birmingham, said to a standing-room-only crowd at the annual meeting of the American College of Rheumatology.
One of the guiding principles of the proposed recommendations is that “if a patient is doing well and the RA is under control, switching from one therapy to another should be done by a physician in consultation and agreement with the patient, and arbitrary switching between therapies should not be done,” he said.
Overall, the evidence-based guidelines emphasize several important aspects of RA care, including the following:
• Focus on the common patient and not exceptional cases.
• Give optimal doses of medications for 3 months before escalating or switching therapy.
• Assess disease activity using one of ACR’s recommended measures at a majority of encounters with RA patients.
• Consider methotrexate as the initial therapy in most RA patients.
• Methotrexate is the preferred monotherapy with a disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (DMARD), but other options include sulfasalazine, hydroxychloroquine, or leflunomide.
• A rheumatologist is the clinician of first choice for all patients with RA.
• Limit glucocorticoid treatment to the lowest possible dose for the shortest possible time to offer the best ratio of benefit to risk.
• Routinely assess patients’ functional status with standardized validated measures at least once yearly, or more frequently when RA is active.
The draft guidelines strongly recommend “using a treat-to-target strategy rather than a nontargeted approach” in both early and established RA.
Ideally, the target to be determined by the clinician and patient, should be remission or low disease activity. The guidelines acknowledge, however, that in some cases risk tolerance or comorbidities may require choice of a different and presumably less aggressive target.
Early RA
For early RA in treatment-naive patients, the guidelines offer an algorithm suggesting DMARD monotherapy for patients with low disease activity and, if the disease flares, recourse to short-term glucocorticoids.
For patients with moderately or highly active early RA, DMARD monotherapy can be followed with either short-term glucocorticoids, or in the case of DMARD failure, to either combination traditional DMARDs, a tumor necrosis factor inhibitor (TNFi) with or without methotrexate, or a non-TNF biologic agent with or without methotrexate, and with or without low-dose glucocorticoids. If the above therapies fail, the clinician and patient should consider a treatment course used for established RA.
Established RA
As with early RA, DMARD-naive patients with low disease activity may be started on DMARD monotherapy and proceed to traditional DMARD combinations, a TNFi with/without methotrexate, or non-TNF biologic with/without methotrexate, or tofacitinib with methotrexate. The guidelines offer a less robust recommendation about adding low-dose glucocorticoids, or short-term glucocorticoids for flares.
Patients who have not responded to treatment with single TNFi can move to a non-TNF biologic plus or minus methotrexate, or a different TNFi with/without methotrexate.
Patients who have not responded to treatment with multiple TNFi can try a non-TNF biologic plus/minus methotrexate, or tofacitinib with or without methotrexate.
Patients who have not responded to treatment with a single non-TNF biologic agent can try a different non-TNF biologic with/without methotrexate.
When both a TNFi and non-TNF biologic fail to help, the patient can try another non-TNF biologic plus/minus methotrexate, or tofacitinib plus/minus methotrexate.
Patients for whom multiple non-TNF biologic agents have failed can try either tofacitinib plus/minus methotrexate, or, if the patient is TNFi naive, a TNFi plus/minus methotrexate.
Special considerations
The guidelines make recommendations about treating patients with previously treated or untreated melanoma (TNFi preferable to tofacitinib) or nonmelanoma skin cancer (combination DMARD or non-TNF biologic preferable to TNFi) or a previously treated lymphoproliferative disorder (combination DMARD or non-TNF biologic such as abatacept, tocilizumab or rituximab over a TNFi). Patients with treated solid-organ malignancies, however, can be treated as other patients with RA are treated.
For patients with active hepatitis B or C virus infection who are receiving effective antiviral therapy, a DMARD, TNFi, non-TNF biologic, or tofacitinib can be prescribed, based on American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases case series and clinical experience, Dr. Singh said.
For patients with established RA and heart failure (HF), the guidelines recommend combination DMARD, non-TNF biologic, or tofacitinib over a TNFi, and if the patient has established or worsening HF on a TNFi, the three drug options above are preferable to switching the patient to another TNFi.
For patients with previous serious infections, however, there was less agreement on the optimal course. The guidelines, as currently planned, recommend a DMARD combination or abatacept over a TNFi in these patients, but there was no consensus about either rituximab or tocilizumab over a TNFi, Dr. Singh noted.
Tapering therapy
Finally, the proposed guidelines deal with therapeutic tapers. Specifically, for patients with established RA and low disease activity on maintenance methotrexate, the guidelines strongly recommend continuing on a traditional DMARD, TNFi, non-TNF biologic, or tofacitinib.
There is a conditional recommendation that patients with established RA in remission continuing on methotrexate can taper traditional DMARD therapy, TNFi, non-TNF biologic, or tofacitinib. But the guidelines strongly recommend against discontinuing all therapies in these patients, Dr. Singh emphasized.
“The strong recommendation is based on clinical experience that only a very small minority of patients are able to discontinue all therapies. Conditional recommendations here, supported by low-level evidence, are largely based upon expert opinion and clinical experience,” said Dr. Singh, who disclosed financial relationships with Allergan, Regeneron, Savient, and Takeda.
Join the queue
The proposed guidelines follow up on ACR’s 2012 guidelines, and will join an already crowded field of clinical practice recommendations, including those published in 2013 by the European League Against Rheumatism.
BOSTON – Treat to target in both early and established rheumatoid arthritis, recommended the authors of American College of Rheumatology draft guidelines on the management of RA.
The new ACR guidelines, expected to be finalized and published by the spring of 2015, also focus on the care of those patients whom most rheumatologists see in day-to-day practice, and they call for patience when trying a new therapy or new dose of an existing drug, Dr. Jasvinder Singh, of the division of clinical immunology and rheumatology at the University of Alabama, Birmingham, said to a standing-room-only crowd at the annual meeting of the American College of Rheumatology.
One of the guiding principles of the proposed recommendations is that “if a patient is doing well and the RA is under control, switching from one therapy to another should be done by a physician in consultation and agreement with the patient, and arbitrary switching between therapies should not be done,” he said.
Overall, the evidence-based guidelines emphasize several important aspects of RA care, including the following:
• Focus on the common patient and not exceptional cases.
• Give optimal doses of medications for 3 months before escalating or switching therapy.
• Assess disease activity using one of ACR’s recommended measures at a majority of encounters with RA patients.
• Consider methotrexate as the initial therapy in most RA patients.
• Methotrexate is the preferred monotherapy with a disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (DMARD), but other options include sulfasalazine, hydroxychloroquine, or leflunomide.
• A rheumatologist is the clinician of first choice for all patients with RA.
• Limit glucocorticoid treatment to the lowest possible dose for the shortest possible time to offer the best ratio of benefit to risk.
• Routinely assess patients’ functional status with standardized validated measures at least once yearly, or more frequently when RA is active.
The draft guidelines strongly recommend “using a treat-to-target strategy rather than a nontargeted approach” in both early and established RA.
Ideally, the target to be determined by the clinician and patient, should be remission or low disease activity. The guidelines acknowledge, however, that in some cases risk tolerance or comorbidities may require choice of a different and presumably less aggressive target.
Early RA
For early RA in treatment-naive patients, the guidelines offer an algorithm suggesting DMARD monotherapy for patients with low disease activity and, if the disease flares, recourse to short-term glucocorticoids.
For patients with moderately or highly active early RA, DMARD monotherapy can be followed with either short-term glucocorticoids, or in the case of DMARD failure, to either combination traditional DMARDs, a tumor necrosis factor inhibitor (TNFi) with or without methotrexate, or a non-TNF biologic agent with or without methotrexate, and with or without low-dose glucocorticoids. If the above therapies fail, the clinician and patient should consider a treatment course used for established RA.
Established RA
As with early RA, DMARD-naive patients with low disease activity may be started on DMARD monotherapy and proceed to traditional DMARD combinations, a TNFi with/without methotrexate, or non-TNF biologic with/without methotrexate, or tofacitinib with methotrexate. The guidelines offer a less robust recommendation about adding low-dose glucocorticoids, or short-term glucocorticoids for flares.
Patients who have not responded to treatment with single TNFi can move to a non-TNF biologic plus or minus methotrexate, or a different TNFi with/without methotrexate.
Patients who have not responded to treatment with multiple TNFi can try a non-TNF biologic plus/minus methotrexate, or tofacitinib with or without methotrexate.
Patients who have not responded to treatment with a single non-TNF biologic agent can try a different non-TNF biologic with/without methotrexate.
When both a TNFi and non-TNF biologic fail to help, the patient can try another non-TNF biologic plus/minus methotrexate, or tofacitinib plus/minus methotrexate.
Patients for whom multiple non-TNF biologic agents have failed can try either tofacitinib plus/minus methotrexate, or, if the patient is TNFi naive, a TNFi plus/minus methotrexate.
Special considerations
The guidelines make recommendations about treating patients with previously treated or untreated melanoma (TNFi preferable to tofacitinib) or nonmelanoma skin cancer (combination DMARD or non-TNF biologic preferable to TNFi) or a previously treated lymphoproliferative disorder (combination DMARD or non-TNF biologic such as abatacept, tocilizumab or rituximab over a TNFi). Patients with treated solid-organ malignancies, however, can be treated as other patients with RA are treated.
For patients with active hepatitis B or C virus infection who are receiving effective antiviral therapy, a DMARD, TNFi, non-TNF biologic, or tofacitinib can be prescribed, based on American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases case series and clinical experience, Dr. Singh said.
For patients with established RA and heart failure (HF), the guidelines recommend combination DMARD, non-TNF biologic, or tofacitinib over a TNFi, and if the patient has established or worsening HF on a TNFi, the three drug options above are preferable to switching the patient to another TNFi.
For patients with previous serious infections, however, there was less agreement on the optimal course. The guidelines, as currently planned, recommend a DMARD combination or abatacept over a TNFi in these patients, but there was no consensus about either rituximab or tocilizumab over a TNFi, Dr. Singh noted.
Tapering therapy
Finally, the proposed guidelines deal with therapeutic tapers. Specifically, for patients with established RA and low disease activity on maintenance methotrexate, the guidelines strongly recommend continuing on a traditional DMARD, TNFi, non-TNF biologic, or tofacitinib.
There is a conditional recommendation that patients with established RA in remission continuing on methotrexate can taper traditional DMARD therapy, TNFi, non-TNF biologic, or tofacitinib. But the guidelines strongly recommend against discontinuing all therapies in these patients, Dr. Singh emphasized.
“The strong recommendation is based on clinical experience that only a very small minority of patients are able to discontinue all therapies. Conditional recommendations here, supported by low-level evidence, are largely based upon expert opinion and clinical experience,” said Dr. Singh, who disclosed financial relationships with Allergan, Regeneron, Savient, and Takeda.
Join the queue
The proposed guidelines follow up on ACR’s 2012 guidelines, and will join an already crowded field of clinical practice recommendations, including those published in 2013 by the European League Against Rheumatism.
BOSTON – Treat to target in both early and established rheumatoid arthritis, recommended the authors of American College of Rheumatology draft guidelines on the management of RA.
The new ACR guidelines, expected to be finalized and published by the spring of 2015, also focus on the care of those patients whom most rheumatologists see in day-to-day practice, and they call for patience when trying a new therapy or new dose of an existing drug, Dr. Jasvinder Singh, of the division of clinical immunology and rheumatology at the University of Alabama, Birmingham, said to a standing-room-only crowd at the annual meeting of the American College of Rheumatology.
One of the guiding principles of the proposed recommendations is that “if a patient is doing well and the RA is under control, switching from one therapy to another should be done by a physician in consultation and agreement with the patient, and arbitrary switching between therapies should not be done,” he said.
Overall, the evidence-based guidelines emphasize several important aspects of RA care, including the following:
• Focus on the common patient and not exceptional cases.
• Give optimal doses of medications for 3 months before escalating or switching therapy.
• Assess disease activity using one of ACR’s recommended measures at a majority of encounters with RA patients.
• Consider methotrexate as the initial therapy in most RA patients.
• Methotrexate is the preferred monotherapy with a disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (DMARD), but other options include sulfasalazine, hydroxychloroquine, or leflunomide.
• A rheumatologist is the clinician of first choice for all patients with RA.
• Limit glucocorticoid treatment to the lowest possible dose for the shortest possible time to offer the best ratio of benefit to risk.
• Routinely assess patients’ functional status with standardized validated measures at least once yearly, or more frequently when RA is active.
The draft guidelines strongly recommend “using a treat-to-target strategy rather than a nontargeted approach” in both early and established RA.
Ideally, the target to be determined by the clinician and patient, should be remission or low disease activity. The guidelines acknowledge, however, that in some cases risk tolerance or comorbidities may require choice of a different and presumably less aggressive target.
Early RA
For early RA in treatment-naive patients, the guidelines offer an algorithm suggesting DMARD monotherapy for patients with low disease activity and, if the disease flares, recourse to short-term glucocorticoids.
For patients with moderately or highly active early RA, DMARD monotherapy can be followed with either short-term glucocorticoids, or in the case of DMARD failure, to either combination traditional DMARDs, a tumor necrosis factor inhibitor (TNFi) with or without methotrexate, or a non-TNF biologic agent with or without methotrexate, and with or without low-dose glucocorticoids. If the above therapies fail, the clinician and patient should consider a treatment course used for established RA.
Established RA
As with early RA, DMARD-naive patients with low disease activity may be started on DMARD monotherapy and proceed to traditional DMARD combinations, a TNFi with/without methotrexate, or non-TNF biologic with/without methotrexate, or tofacitinib with methotrexate. The guidelines offer a less robust recommendation about adding low-dose glucocorticoids, or short-term glucocorticoids for flares.
Patients who have not responded to treatment with single TNFi can move to a non-TNF biologic plus or minus methotrexate, or a different TNFi with/without methotrexate.
Patients who have not responded to treatment with multiple TNFi can try a non-TNF biologic plus/minus methotrexate, or tofacitinib with or without methotrexate.
Patients who have not responded to treatment with a single non-TNF biologic agent can try a different non-TNF biologic with/without methotrexate.
When both a TNFi and non-TNF biologic fail to help, the patient can try another non-TNF biologic plus/minus methotrexate, or tofacitinib plus/minus methotrexate.
Patients for whom multiple non-TNF biologic agents have failed can try either tofacitinib plus/minus methotrexate, or, if the patient is TNFi naive, a TNFi plus/minus methotrexate.
Special considerations
The guidelines make recommendations about treating patients with previously treated or untreated melanoma (TNFi preferable to tofacitinib) or nonmelanoma skin cancer (combination DMARD or non-TNF biologic preferable to TNFi) or a previously treated lymphoproliferative disorder (combination DMARD or non-TNF biologic such as abatacept, tocilizumab or rituximab over a TNFi). Patients with treated solid-organ malignancies, however, can be treated as other patients with RA are treated.
For patients with active hepatitis B or C virus infection who are receiving effective antiviral therapy, a DMARD, TNFi, non-TNF biologic, or tofacitinib can be prescribed, based on American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases case series and clinical experience, Dr. Singh said.
For patients with established RA and heart failure (HF), the guidelines recommend combination DMARD, non-TNF biologic, or tofacitinib over a TNFi, and if the patient has established or worsening HF on a TNFi, the three drug options above are preferable to switching the patient to another TNFi.
For patients with previous serious infections, however, there was less agreement on the optimal course. The guidelines, as currently planned, recommend a DMARD combination or abatacept over a TNFi in these patients, but there was no consensus about either rituximab or tocilizumab over a TNFi, Dr. Singh noted.
Tapering therapy
Finally, the proposed guidelines deal with therapeutic tapers. Specifically, for patients with established RA and low disease activity on maintenance methotrexate, the guidelines strongly recommend continuing on a traditional DMARD, TNFi, non-TNF biologic, or tofacitinib.
There is a conditional recommendation that patients with established RA in remission continuing on methotrexate can taper traditional DMARD therapy, TNFi, non-TNF biologic, or tofacitinib. But the guidelines strongly recommend against discontinuing all therapies in these patients, Dr. Singh emphasized.
“The strong recommendation is based on clinical experience that only a very small minority of patients are able to discontinue all therapies. Conditional recommendations here, supported by low-level evidence, are largely based upon expert opinion and clinical experience,” said Dr. Singh, who disclosed financial relationships with Allergan, Regeneron, Savient, and Takeda.
Join the queue
The proposed guidelines follow up on ACR’s 2012 guidelines, and will join an already crowded field of clinical practice recommendations, including those published in 2013 by the European League Against Rheumatism.
AT THE ACR ANNUAL MEETING