| Literature DB >> 27623619 |
Fabian Speth1, Johannes-Peter Haas1, Claas H Hinze2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: High-dose intravenous immune globulins (IVIg) are frequently used in refractory juvenile dermatomyositis (JDM) but are often poorly tolerated. High-dose recombinant human hyaluronidase-facilitated subcutaneous immune globulins (fSCIg) allow the administration of much higher doses of immune globulins than conventional subcutaneous immune globulin therapy and may be an alternative to IVIg. The safety and efficacy of fSCIg therapy in JDM is unknown. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Intravenous immune globulins; Juvenile dermatomyositis; Recombinant human hyaluronidase; Subcutaneous immune globulins
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27623619 PMCID: PMC5022227 DOI: 10.1186/s12969-016-0112-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Rheumatol Online J ISSN: 1546-0096 Impact factor: 3.054
Patient demographics, current antirheumatic therapy, reasons for initiation of subcutaneous immune globulins, and disease course following fSCIg therapy
| Patient | Sex, age, age at disease onset, body weight | Clinical phenotype and disease severitya, age at disease onset, MSA status | Disease activity at time of fSCIg initiation | Previous or concurrent antirheumatic treatments | Reason for initiation of fSCIg instead of IVIg, CMAS at time of fSCIg initiation | Disease course following initiation of fSCIg |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Male, 11 years, 9 years at disease onset, 35 kg | Classic, severe JDM with prominent skin involvement, joint contractures, Anti-Mi-2 positive | Clinically inactive (however, recent recurrence after attempted IVIg discontiuation) | IVIg (60 g/month), fSCIg (70 g/month), PDN 0.125 mg/kg/day, MTX 15 mg/m2/week, HCQ | IVIg adverse effects (headaches, nausea and vomiting), needle phobia | Within 3 months mild deterioration of CMAS (49 instead of 51); resolution after switching to fSCIg 5 days apart |
| 2 | Female, 10 years, 8 years at disease onset, 35 kg | Classic, severe JDM with prominent vaculopathy, dysphagia, cutaneous ulcerations, myocarditis, joint contractures, calcinosis, Anti-TIF-1gamma positive | Residual disease activity, vasculopathy | IVIg (70 g/month), fSCIg (70 g/month), PDN 0.21 mg/kg/day, MMF 1200 mg/m2/d, MTX 15 mg/m2/week, RTX (status post 375 mg/m2 ×4), CYC (status post 6 × 750 mg/m2) | IVIg adverse effects (headaches), difficult peripheral venous access with port-a-cath | Stable mild residual disease activity even after switching to fSCIg 5 days apart |
| 3 | Female, 7 years, 5 years at disease onset, 20 kg | Classic, severe JDM with prominent vasculopathy, cutaneous ulcerations, Anti-SRP and anti-MI-2 positive | Clinically inactive (recent recurrence) | IVIg (40 g/month), fSCIg (40 g/month), PDN 0.125 mg/kg/day, MMF 1200 mg/m2/d, MTX 15 mg/m2/week | IVIg adverse effects (headaches, nausea and vomiting), needle phobia | Maintenance of clinically inactive disease; CMAS 52; fSCIg continued biweekly |
| 4 | Male, 12 years, 8 years at disease onset, 35 kg | Classic, moderately severe JDM with nodular dystrophic calcification, anti-NXP-2 positive | Clinically inactive (however, progressive calcinosis) | IVIg (35 g/month), fSCIg (60 g/month) PDN 0.07 mg/kg/day, MMF 1200 mg/m2/d, Colchicin | IVIg adverse effects (headaches, nausea and vomiting), needle phobia, residual disease activity with insufficient IVIg dose | Maintenance of clinically inactive disease; CMAS 52; calcinosis decreasing; fSCIg continued biweekly |
| 5 | Female, 8 years, 5 years at disease onset, 20 kg | Classic, severe JDM with rhadomyolysis, failure to thrive and nephrolithiasis, MSA negative | Active skin and muscle disease (IVIg was discontinued 6 months earlier) | IVIG (40 g/month), fSCIg (50 g/month) | IVIg adverse effects (headaches, nausea and vomiting), needle phobia | Improvement but residual, mild proximal muscle weakness; normal muscle strength (inactive disease) after switching to fSCIg 5 days apart; CMAS 50; further PDN reduction |
Abbreviations: CYC cyclophosphamide, IVIg intravenous immune globulins, fSCIg subcutaneous immune globulins facilitated by recombinant human hyaluronidase, MMF mycophenolate mofetil, MSA myositis-specific antibodies, MTX methotrexate, PDN prednisolone, RTX rituximab
aDefinition of disease severity according to Huber et al. [5]
Fig. 1IgG levels before initiation of Ig therapy, peak and trough serum IgG levels (during high-dose IVIg therapy) and peak levels during SCIg therapy. Values represent mean values and error bars standard deviation (if multiple measurements are available). The dashed lines represent the upper and lower limit of the normal range