Literature DB >> 26557369

CanVasc recommendations for the management of antineutrophil cytoplasm antibody (ANCA)-associated vasculitides - Executive summary.

Lucy McGeoch1, Marinka Twilt2, Leilani Famorca3, Volodko Bakowsky4, Lillian Barra5, Susan Benseler2, David A Cabral6, Simon Carette7, Gerald P Cox8, Navjot Dhindsa9, Christine Dipchand10, Aurore Fifi-Mah11, Michele Goulet12, Nader Khalidi13, Majed M Khraishi14, Patrick Liang15, Nataliya Milman16, Christian A Pineau17, Heather Reich18, Nooshin Samadi19, Kam Shojania20, Regina Taylor-Gjevre21, Tanveer E Towheed22, Judith Trudeau23, Michael Walsh24, Elaine Yacyshyn25, Christian Pagnoux7.   

Abstract

The Canadian Vasculitis research network (CanVasc) is composed of physicians from different medical specialties, including rheumatology and nephrology and researchers with expertise in vasculitis. One of its aims was to develop recommendations for the diagnosis and management of antineutrophil cytoplasm antibody (ANCA)-associated vasculitides in Canada. This executive summary features the 19 recommendations and 17 statements addressing general AAV diagnosis and management, developed by CanVasc group based on a synthesis of existing international guidelines, other published supporting evidence and expert consensus considering the Canadian healthcare context.

Entities:  

Year:  2015        PMID: 26557369      PMCID: PMC4638094          DOI: 10.1186/s40697-015-0078-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Can J Kidney Health Dis        ISSN: 2054-3581


Background

ANCA-associated vasculitides (AAV, including granulomatosis with polyangiitis [GPA], microscopic polyangiitis [MPA] and eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis [EGPA]) are potentially life-threatening vasculitides characterized by inflammation of small-sized blood vessels with resultant ischemic events, hemorrhagic events or both [1]. Their rarity and the heterogeneous nature of AAV mean that the management of individual patients can be extremely challenging and may vary markedly across different geographical regions and medical disciplines. Existing guidelines were initially developed prior to 2010, most have not yet been updated, and did not take into account the specificities of health care system delivery, access to services and drug treatments in Canada [2-11]. The Canadian Vasculitis research network (CanVasc) was created in November 2010 and its core committee includes physicians of different specialties, though primarily rheumatologists and nephrologists. One of the first major objectives of CanVasc was the development of recommendations for the management of patients with AAV within Canada, based on a synthesis of existing international guidelines, supporting evidence and expert consensus of a national Canadian AAV clinical and research network.

Contexte

Les vascularites associées aux ANCA (les VAA, incluant la granulomatose avec polyangéite [GPA], la polyangéïte microscopique [MPA], et la granulomatose éosinophilique avec polyangéite [EGPA]) sont des vascularites caractérisées par une inflammation de la paroi des vaisseaux sanguins de petit calibre, aboutissant à des complications ischémiques ou hémorragiques, et qui mettent souvent en jeu le pronostic vital. Leur rareté, de même que leur présentations cliniques variées, rendent la prise en charge des patients extrêmement ardue, surtout si elle diffère selon les régions géographiques et les disciplines médicales. Les recommandations internationales de prise en charge des VAA existantes ont été développées avant 2010; la plupart n’ont pas encore été mises à jour et aucune ne tenait compte des spécificités de prestation des soins, d’accès aux services et aux divers traitements pharmacologiques dans le réseau de santé canadien. Le groupe de recherche canadien sur les vascularites (CanVasc) a été créé en novembre 2010. Il est constitué de médecins de diverses spécialités, quoique surtout des rhumatologues et néphrologues. L’un des objectifs principaux de CanVasc était l’élaboration de recommandations de prise en charge des patients atteints de VAA au Canada, en se basant sur les recommandations internationales déjà existantes, les autres preuves scientifiques et publications dans le domaine des VAA, et un processus avec plusieurs étapes afin d’aboutir à un consensus.

Methods

Prior to initiating the development of these recommendations, a national Needs Assessment Questionnaire was disseminated to identify the specific areas of need, possible knowledge gaps and outline key questions [12]. The international existing clinical practice guidelines and consensus statements on the management of AAV published in English or French between 2006 and May 2014 were then reviewed, in addition to Cochrane library and PubMed Medline searches for all therapeutic studies published after the 2009 European League against Rheumatism/European Vasculitis Society (EULAR/EUVAS) recommendations and May 2014. The first draft of these recommendations was developed by the core group of the CanVasc recommendation working group and included 37 recommendations, with the rationale behind each of them, the corresponding recommendations and guidance from other societies, when existing and the level of evidence categorized and graded according to the criteria previously endorsed by EULAR/EUVAS [2, 13]. This first draft was reviewed by all members of the CanVasc recommendation working group (using a modified Delphi method) with a phone conference held thereafter to reach consensus on all debated recommendations, especially those not agreed upon by >80 % of the reviewers. A revised version of recommendations was then developed and distributed again for review to the same working group and a broader spectrum of other reviewers, including members of several professional medical societies and specialists and the administrative bureau of the Canadian support group for vasculitis patients (Vasculitis Foundation Canada). The comments were gathered and discussed during a second teleconference with the members of the CanVasc recommendation working group to reach consensus on the final version of the document, which was endorsed by the Canadian Rheumatology Association (CRA) Guidelines Committee on March 21st, 2015.

Results

The final document (the full version of the recommendations is available online at http://www.jrheum.org) includes 19 recommendations and 17 statements addressing general management strategies for AAV, including their diagnosis, treatments with glucocorticoids, traditional immunosuppressants and biologic agents, and follow up for rheumatologists, nephrologists, respirologists, general internists, general practitioners and all other health care professionals more occasionally involved in the management of patients with AAV in community and academic practice settings. Each therapeutic recommendation and statement is accompanied by supporting text, which reports on the expected health benefits, potential side effects and risks, and Canadian system factors that may influence their applicability. Therapeutic recommendations are presented with a level of evidence and strength (Table 1 of the executive summary). Statements are for non-therapeutic recommendations and working group consensus, for which there is no strong supporting evidence from controlled studies are not graded. For each recommendation and statement, we also present in the extended version (available online with the full version of the recommendations at http://www.jrheum.org) corresponding recommendations and guidance previously published on the same topic from other societies, when available.
Table 1

Summary table of the CanVasc recommendations and statements

Recommendation or statementText of the recommendation or statementEvidence level/strengtha
Diagnosis
Statement 1ANCA testing with ELISA and indirect immunofluorescence methods should be performed for diagnostic purposes in patients in whom there is clinical suspicion of a systemic small- and/or medium-sized vessel vasculitis.
Statement 2Tissue biopsy should be considered in cases of suspected AAV to confirm diagnosis.
Classification of disease severity in AAV
Statement 3Patients with AAV should have the extent and severity of their disease categorized as ‘severe’ at the time of diagnosis and in case of subsequent relapse if they have life- or major organ-threatening manifestations in order to tailor therapy accordingly.
The role of referral centres for vasculitis
Statement 4Patients with AAV, particularly those with challenging disease, should be managed at or in collaboration with, a referral centre for vasculitis.
Remission induction for newly-diagnosed disease
Remission induction in severe (organ/life-threatening disease) newly-diagnosed disease
Recommendation 1We recommend remission induction therapy with a combination of high dose glucocorticoids and cyclophosphamide in patients with severe newly diagnosed GPA, MPA or EGPA. 1B/A
Recommendation 2We recommend using high dose glucocorticoids with rituximab as 1st line remission induction therapy in patients with severe GPA or MPA in whom cyclophosphamide is contraindicated or in whom cyclophosphamide presents an unacceptable risk of infertility. 1B/A
Recommendation 3Cyclophosphamide dose should be adjusted in patients >60 years of age and in those with renal impairment. 1B/B
Statement 5Complete blood count (CBC) and serum creatinine level must be monitored in patients treated with cyclophosphamide. In patients with abnormal CBC results, temporary withholding of cyclophosphamide and subsequent dose adjustments may be necessary depending on the degree of leucopenia.
Recommendation 4We recommend that the remission induction therapy with cyclophosphamide, combined with glucocorticoids, lasts a minimum of 3 to a maximum of 6 months. Once remission is achieved, cyclophosphamide should be stopped and switched to a different maintenance therapy. 1B/A
Recommendation 5We recommend that glucocorticoids should be given in adults at an initial dose of 1 mg/kg/day prednisone-equivalent for remission induction purposes. This may be preceded by pulsed methylprednisolone (0.5–1 g/day for 1–3 days) in patients with life threatening disease and/or major organ involvement. 2A/B
Recommendation 6Prophylaxis against Pneumocystis jiroveci infection should be given to patients receiving cyclophosphamide or rituximab. This prophylaxis consists, in the absence of allergy, of trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole compounds (800/160 mg 1 tablet 3 times per week or 400/80 mg daily). 3/C
Recommendation 7There is insufficient evidence to support a recommendation that plasma exchange be used as first line therapy in any AAV patients. Plasma exchange may be a reasonable adjuvant therapy for patients who clinically deteriorate due to active vasculitis despite ongoing remission induction therapy with high-dose glucocorticoids and cyclophosphamide or rituximab. 4/D
Remission induction for limited or non-severe (non organ- and non life-threatening), newly-diagnosed disease
Recommendation 8In patients with limited and/or non-severe GPA, which is non-life threatening and without any major organ involvement, remission induction regime with methotrexate in combination with glucocorticoids can be used. 1B / A
Recommendation 9Patients with non-severe EGPA or non-severe MPA without renal involvement can be treated with glucocorticoids alone for remission induction. At present, there is no consensus on the use of any immunosuppressant agents in combination with glucocorticoids in patients with EGPA or MPA that are non-severe (including those with mononeuritis multiplex). 2B/C
Remission maintenance therapy
Recommendation 10In patients with severe AAV in remission after a combined cyclophosphamide-glucocorticoid-based induction treatment, maintenance therapy can be based on azathioprine or methotrexate, initially in combination with low-dose glucocorticoids. Leflunomide or mycophenolate may be alternative agents in patients not tolerating or with contra-indications to azathioprine and methotrexate. 1B/B
Recommendation 11In patients with severe AAV in remission after a combined cyclophosphamide-glucocorticoid-based induction treatment, maintenance therapy with rituximab infusions is an alternative to azathioprine, especially for those patients with PR3-ANCA-positive GPA. 1B/A
Statement 6To date there is no definitive evidence to guide decisions for maintenance therapy after remission induction with rituximab.
Statement 7Low dose glucocorticoids should be part of the initial remission maintenance therapy after remission is achieved; there is not enough evidence yet to support further recommendation on the optimal duration of low dose glucocorticoids.
Recommendation 12We recommend the use of azathioprine, methotrexate or their alternatives (as per Recommendation 10 and 11) for remission maintenance therapy to be continued for a minimum of 18 months after successful remission induction. There is not enough evidence yet to support further recommendation on the optimal duration of their use for maintenance. 3/C
Recommendation 13The use of trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (800/160 mg twice daily) as remission maintenance therapy can be considered in GPA as an adjuvant to immunosuppressant or after the cessation of maintenance immunosuppressive treatment. 3/C
Recommendation 14Topical therapies may be considered, in combination with the systemic therapy and in collaboration with ENT subspecialists, to alleviate the symptoms of upper airway and ENT disease. 3/C
Relapsing disease
Recommendation 15We recommend remission induction of a major organ- or life-threatening relapse with either cyclophosphamide or rituximab in conjunction with high dose glucocorticoids. In patients who already received cyclophosphamide for initial remission induction or a previous disease flare, we recommend using rituximab for remission re-induction. 1B/A
Recommendation 16There is insufficient evidence to support a recommendation that plasma exchange be used as first line therapy in all patients with relapsing AAV with severe renal (GFR <50 ml/min) or pulmonary hemorrhage. Plasma exchange may be a reasonable adjuvant therapy for patients who clinically deteriorate due to active relapsing vasculitis despite ongoing remission induction therapy with high-dose glucocorticoids and cyclophosphamide or rituximab. 4/D
Recommendation 17We recommend that relapses that are non-severe, i.e. non-life and non-organ threatening, be treated with an increase in glucocorticoid dose in addition to optimizing the patient’s concurrent immunosuppressant agent. 3/C
Refractory disease
Recommendation 18We recommend the use of rituximab, in combination with glucocorticoids, in patients with severe GPA or MPA who fail to respond to cyclophosphamide as remission induction therapy. 3/C
Statement 8Patients with refractory disease should be managed in a referral centre for vasculitis in collaboration with subspecialists with experience in managing such patients.
Statement 9Patients with EGPA and persistent asthmatic symptoms, despite remission of their vasculitic manifestations, should be managed in collaboration with a physician subspecializing in asthma management.
Additional and experimental therapies
Statement 10In patients in whom the aforementioned therapies are ineffective, contraindicated or poorly tolerated, consideration can be given to alternate, additional and/or experimental therapies in collaboration with a referral centre for vasculitis.
Follow up of patients with AAV
Statement 11Patients with AAV should be followed regularly for many years with full clinical assessment and routine laboratory work to assess disease course and track for disease activity and disease- or treatment-related damage.
Statement 12All patients previously treated with cyclophosphamide should have a urinalysis every 3–6 months as a lifelong means of screening for cyclophosphamide-induced bladder toxicity. If micro- or macroscopic hematuria is present, in the absence of an alternate explanation, the patient should be referred for consideration of a cystoscopy.
Statement 13As part of their lifelong annual follow-up, cardiovascular risk factors (including smoking status, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, hypertension and obesity) and risk for osteoporosis should be systematically assessed, with treatment as needed according to the current respective guidelines for each of these conditions.
Special patient groups
Statement 14Women with AAV should not consider pregnancy earlier than 6 months after sustained remission of their disease has been achieved. Women with AAV planning pregnancy and those pregnant should be managed in close collaboration with an obstetrician with expertise in this field and/or in high-risk pregnancies.
Statement 15There are no pediatric specific management guidelines for pediatric AAV, and most knowledge in pediatric AAV is adapted from adult research. Management of children with AAV should be provided by pediatric physicians at an academic healthcare Centre, in collaboration with referral centres for vasculitis and/or centres with special interest in pediatric vasculitis.
Statement 16AAV in children should be classified at the time of diagnosis based on the childhood EULAR/PRINTO/PReS criteria in order to tailor therapy accordingly.
Statement 17Children with newly diagnosed AAV should be treated according to adult recommendations for induction of remission and then maintenance, with dose of medications adjusted for this specific population.
Recommendation 19In children, severe relapsing AAV or severe AAV refractory to the combination of cyclophosphamide and glucocorticoids (with major organ involvement or life-threatening manifestations) should be treated with rituximab, in combination with glucocorticoids. 4/D

aStatements are not related to specific treatments and were not be graded as there was no strong evidence or available studies to support them

Summary table of the CanVasc recommendations and statements aStatements are not related to specific treatments and were not be graded as there was no strong evidence or available studies to support them

Discussion and conclusion

This document will serve as useful knowledge to support decision-making for any physician involved in the care of patients with AAV, including adults and children. Best clinical judgment must however always prevail when confronted with each specific patient scenario. New information from ongoing research may already have become available by the time the present document is published. Regular updates will thus be mandatory.
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1.  EULAR standardised operating procedures for the elaboration, evaluation, dissemination, and implementation of recommendations endorsed by the EULAR standing committees.

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Review 2.  The CARI guidelines. ANCA serology in the diagnosis and management of ANCA-associated renal vasculitis.

Authors:  Grant Luxton; Robyn Langham
Journal:  Nephrology (Carlton)       Date:  2008-07       Impact factor: 2.506

Review 3.  The CARI guidelines. Induction and maintenance therapy in ANCA-associated systemic vasculitis.

Authors:  Solomon Menahem; Balaji Hiremagalur; David Mudge; Nigel Toussaint; Giles Walters
Journal:  Nephrology (Carlton)       Date:  2008-07       Impact factor: 2.506

4.  EULAR recommendations for the management of primary small and medium vessel vasculitis.

Authors:  C Mukhtyar; L Guillevin; M C Cid; B Dasgupta; K de Groot; W Gross; T Hauser; B Hellmich; D Jayne; C G M Kallenberg; P A Merkel; H Raspe; C Salvarani; D G I Scott; C Stegeman; R Watts; K Westman; J Witter; H Yazici; R Luqmani
Journal:  Ann Rheum Dis       Date:  2008-04-15       Impact factor: 19.103

5.  BSR and BHPR guidelines for the management of adults with ANCA associated vasculitis.

Authors:  C Lapraik; R Watts; P Bacon; D Carruthers; K Chakravarty; D D'Cruz; L Guillevin; L Harper; D Jayne; R Luqmani; J Mooney; D Scott
Journal:  Rheumatology (Oxford)       Date:  2007-09-05       Impact factor: 7.580

6.  Guideline for management of vasculitis syndrome (JCS 2008). Japanese Circulation Society.

Authors: 
Journal:  Circ J       Date:  2011-01-20       Impact factor: 2.993

7.  BSR and BHPR guideline for the management of adults with ANCA-associated vasculitis.

Authors:  Eleana Ntatsaki; David Carruthers; Kuntal Chakravarty; David D'Cruz; Lorraine Harper; David Jayne; Raashid Luqmani; John Mills; Janice Mooney; Michael Venning; Richard A Watts
Journal:  Rheumatology (Oxford)       Date:  2014-04-11       Impact factor: 7.580

8.  Rituximab: Recommendations of the French Vasculitis Study Group (FVSG) for induction and maintenance treatments of adult, antineutrophil cytoplasm antibody-associated necrotizing vasculitides.

Authors:  Pierre Charles; Boris Bienvenu; Bernard Bonnotte; Pierre Gobert; Pascal Godmer; Éric Hachulla; Mohamed Hamidou; Jean-Robert Harlé; Alexandre Karras; Jean-Christophe Lega; Alain Le Quellec; Alfred D Mahr; Luc Mouthon; Thomas Papo; Xavier Puéchal; Gregory Pugnet; Maxime Samson; Jean Sibilia; Benjamin Terrier; Frederick Vandergheynst; Loïc Guillevin
Journal:  Presse Med       Date:  2013-10-02       Impact factor: 1.228

9.  2012 revised International Chapel Hill Consensus Conference Nomenclature of Vasculitides.

Authors:  J C Jennette; R J Falk; P A Bacon; N Basu; M C Cid; F Ferrario; L F Flores-Suarez; W L Gross; L Guillevin; E C Hagen; G S Hoffman; D R Jayne; C G M Kallenberg; P Lamprecht; C A Langford; R A Luqmani; A D Mahr; E L Matteson; P A Merkel; S Ozen; C D Pusey; N Rasmussen; A J Rees; D G I Scott; U Specks; J H Stone; K Takahashi; R A Watts
Journal:  Arthritis Rheum       Date:  2013-01

10.  Development of Canadian Recommendations for the Management of ANCA-Associated Vasculitides: Results of the National Needs Assessment Questionnaire.

Authors:  Leilani Famorca; Marinka Twilt; Lillian Barra; Volodko Bakowsky; Susanne Benseler; David Cabral; Simon Carette; Navjot Dhindsa; Aurore Fifi-Mah; Michelle Goulet; Nader Khalidi; Majed Khraishi; Lucy McGeoch; Nataliya Milman; Christian Pineau; Kam Shojania; Regina Taylor-Gjevre; Tanveer Towheed; Judith Trudeau; Elaine Yacyshyn; Patrick Liang; Christian Pagnoux
Journal:  Open Rheumatol J       Date:  2015-04-14
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Review 1.  Pathogenesis and treatment of ANCA-associated vasculitis-a role for complement.

Authors:  Damien Noone; Diane Hebert; Christoph Licht
Journal:  Pediatr Nephrol       Date:  2016-09-05       Impact factor: 3.714

2.  Identifying relevant determinants of in-hospital time to diagnosis for ANCA-associated vasculitis patients.

Authors:  Ebru Dirikgil; Sander W Tas; Cornelis A Verburgh; Darius Soonawala; A Elisabeth Hak; Hilde H F Remmelts; Daphne IJpelaar; Gozewijn D Laverman; Abraham Rutgers; Jaap M van Laar; Hein J Bernelot Moens; Peter M J Verhoeven; Ton J Rabelink; Willem Jan W Bos; Y K Onno Teng
Journal:  Rheumatol Adv Pract       Date:  2022-06-09

Review 3.  Paediatric anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA)-associated vasculitis: an update on renal management.

Authors:  Lucy A Plumb; Louise Oni; Stephen D Marks; Kjell Tullus
Journal:  Pediatr Nephrol       Date:  2017-01-06       Impact factor: 3.714

4.  18F-fluoro-deoxy-glucose positron emission tomography combined with computed tomography can reliably rule-out infection and cancer in patients with anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody-associated vasculitis suspected of disease relapse.

Authors:  Evan C Frary; Søren Hess; Oke Gerke; Helle Laustrup
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2017-07       Impact factor: 1.889

5.  Clinical practice variation and need for pediatric-specific treatment guidelines among rheumatologists caring for children with ANCA-associated vasculitis: an international clinician survey.

Authors:  Clara Westwell-Roper; Joanna M Lubieniecka; Kelly L Brown; Kimberly A Morishita; Cherry Mammen; Linda Wagner-Weiner; Eric Yen; Suzanne C Li; Kathleen M O'Neil; Sivia K Lapidus; Paul Brogan; Rolando Cimaz; David A Cabral
Journal:  Pediatr Rheumatol Online J       Date:  2017-08-07       Impact factor: 3.054

6.  Biologic medicine inclusion in 138 national essential medicines lists.

Authors:  Raphaël Kraus; Rae S M Yeung; Nav Persaud
Journal:  Pediatr Rheumatol Online J       Date:  2021-09-06       Impact factor: 3.054

  6 in total

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