| Literature DB >> 23392597 |
J Wollenhaupt1, K Albrecht, K Krüger, U Müller-Ladner.
Abstract
The German Society for Rheumatology recently published guidelines for the sequential therapy of rheumatoid arthritis (RA). These recommendations were developed as a transition from the 2010 EULAR (EUropean League Against Rheumatism) recommendations to the national clinical practice and are based on an updated systematic literature research and expert discussion. While most EULAR recommendations have remained unchanged, some were modified based on new evidence from randomized, controlled trials, current clinical practice, or national drug approval status. The guidelines also include a treatment algorithm for sequential therapy of RA with disease-modifying agents including biologics.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23392597 PMCID: PMC3567332 DOI: 10.1007/s00393-012-1093-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Z Rheumatol ISSN: 0340-1855 Impact factor: 1.372
German 2012 recommendations for the medical treatment of rheumatoid arthritis
| Overarching principles | |
|---|---|
| A | Rheumatologists are the specialists who should primarily care for patients with RA |
| B | Treatment of patients with RA should aim at the best care and is based on a shared decision between the patient and the rheumatologist |
| C | RA is expensive in regards to direct and indirect costs both of which should be considered by the treating rheumatologist |
|
| |
| 1 | Treatment with conventional DMARDs should be started as soon as the diagnosis of RA is made |
| 2 | The target of remission or low disease activity should be reached as soon as possible. As long as the target has not been reached, adjustment of treatment and frequent monitoring is necessary |
| 3 | MTX should be the first DMARD in patients with active RA |
| 4 | When MTX cannot be used as first treatment, another conventional DMARD, e.g., leflunomide or sulfasalazine, should be considered |
| 5 | Initial combination therapy with conventional DMARDs has not demonstrated advantages to monotherapy in patients with active RA |
| 6 | Glucocorticoids should be added to the initial treatment with conventional DMARDs at low to moderately high doses |
| 7 | If the treatment target is not achieved despite optimized DMARD monotherapy, a combination therapy with conventional DMARDs should be considered. In case of high disease activity, especially in combination with poor prognostic factors, combination with a biological DMARD should be considered |
| 8 | After failure of two conventional DMARDs (in monotherapy or in combination), a biologic therapy is recommended |
| 9 | Patients with active RA, for whom a TNF inhibitor has failed as the first biologic DMARD, can switch to another TNF inhibitor, abatacept, rituximab, or tocilizumab |
| 10 | In case of refractory RA or contraindications to the previously mentioned conventional or biologic DMARDs, other DMARDs and immunmodulated therapies can be considered |
| 11 | In case of sustained remission, a stepwise tapering of the DMARD therapy should be considered as a shared decision between patient and doctor |
| 12 | Apart from disease activity, factors such as structural progression, comorbidities, safety concerns, and social aspects should be taken into account |
RA rheumatoid arthritis, DMARDs disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs, MTX methotrexate, TNF tumor necrosis factor.
The 2010 EULAR recommendations for the management of rheumatoid arthritis with nonbiological and biological disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs [2]
| Overarching principles | |
|---|---|
| A | Rheumatologists are the specialists who should primarily care for patients with RA |
| B | Treatment of patients with RA should aim at the best care and must be based on a shared decision between the patient and the rheumatologist |
| C | RA is expensive in regards to medical costs and productivity costs, both of which should be considered by the treating rheumatologist |
|
| |
| 1 | Treatment with synthetic DMARDs should be started as soon as the diagnosis of RA is made |
| 2 | Treatment should be aimed at reaching a target of remission or low disease activity as soon as possible in every patient; as long as the target has not been reached, treatment should be adjusted by frequent (every 1–3 months) and strict monitoring |
| 3 | MTX should be part of the first treatment strategy in patients with active RA |
| 4 | When MTX contraindications (or intolerance) are present, the following DMARDs should be considered as part of the (first) treatment strategy: leflunomide, sulfasalazine, or injectable gold |
| 5 | In DMARD naïve patients, irrespective of the addition of GCs, synthetic DMARD monotherapy rather than combination therapy of synthetic DMARDs may be applied |
| 6 | GCs added at low to moderately high doses to synthetic DMARD monotherapy (or combinations of synthetic DMARDs) provide benefit as initial short-term treatment, but should be tapered as rapidly as clinically feasible |
| 7 | If the treatment target is not achieved with the first DMARD strategy, addition of a biological DMARD should be considered when poor prognostic factors are present; in the absence of poor prognostic factors, switching to another synthetic DMARD strategy should be considered |
| 8 | In patients responding insufficiently to MTX and/or other synthetic DMARDs with or without GCs, biological DMARDs should be started; current practice would be to start a TNF inhibitor (adalimumab, certolizumab, etanercept, golimumab, infliximab) which should be combined with MTX |
| 9 | Patients with RA for whom a first TNF inhibitor has failed should receive another TNF inhibitor, abatacept, rituximab, or tocilizumab |
| 10 | In cases of refractory severe RA or contraindications to biological agents or the previously mentioned synthetic DMARDs, the following synthetic DMARD might be also considered, as monotherapy or in combination with some of the above: azathioprine, cyclosporin A (or exceptionally, cyclophosphamide) |
| 11 | Intensive medication strategies should be considered in every patient, although patients with poor prognostic factors have more to gain |
| 12 | If a patient is in persistent remission, after having tapered GCs, one can consider tapering biological DMARDs, especially if this treatment is combined with a synthetic DMARD |
| 13 | In cases of sustained long-term remission, cautious titration of synthetic DMARD dose could be considered, as a shared decision between patient and doctor |
| 14 | DMARD naïve patients with poor prognostic markers might be considered for combination therapy of MTX plus a biological agent |
| 15 | When adjusting treatment, factors apart from disease activity, such as progression of structural damage, comorbidities and safety concerns should be taken into account |
DMARD disease-modifying antirheumatic drug, GCs glucocorticoids, MTX methotrexate, RA rheumatoid arthritis, TNF tumor necrosis factor.
Fig. 1Algorithm based on the German 2012 recommendations for the medical treatment of rheumatoid arthritis. ABC abatacept, ADM adalimumab, CEZ certolizumab, ETC etanercept, GOM golimumab, INX infliximab, RIX rituximab, TOZ tocilizumab, GC glucocorticoids, CiA ciclosporin A, HCQ hydroxychloroquine, LEF leflunomide, MTX methotrexate, SSZ sulfasalazine, TNF TNF inhibitors. *high disease activity, especially in combination with poor prognostic factors, **in case of MTX contraindication, ADM, CTZ, ETC are also approved in monotherapy, ***in case of MTX contraindication, TOZ is also approved in monotherapy and has demonstrated similar efficacy in monotherapy as well as in combination with MTX