| Literature DB >> 30991730 |
Peter C Taylor1, Alejandro Balsa Criado2, Anne-Barbara Mongey3, Jerome Avouac4, Hubert Marotte5, Rudiger B Mueller6.
Abstract
Methotrexate (MTX) is a remarkable drug with a key role in the management of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) at every stage of its evolution. Its attributes include good overall efficacy for signs and symptoms, inhibition of structural damage and preservation of function with acceptable and manageable safety, a large dose-titratable range, options for either an oral or parenteral route of administration, and currently unrivalled cost-effectiveness. It has a place as a monotherapy and also as an anchor drug that can be safely used in combination with other conventional synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (csDMARDs) or used concomitantly with biological DMARDs or targeted synthetic DMARDs. MTX is not without potential issues regarding toxicity, notably hepatotoxicity and bone marrow toxicity, as well as tolerability problems for some, but not all, patients. But many of these issues can be mitigated or managed. In the face of a welcome expansion in available targeted therapies for the treatment of RA, MTX looks set to remain at the foundation of pharmacotherapy for the majority of people living with RA and other inflammatory rheumatic diseases. In this article, we provide an evidence-based discussion as to how to achieve the best outcomes with this versatile drug in the context of a treat-to-target strategy for the management of RA.Entities:
Keywords: bioavailability; effectiveness; efficacy; methotrexate; oral route; posology; rheumatoid arthritis; subcutaneous route; titration; tolerability
Year: 2019 PMID: 30991730 PMCID: PMC6518419 DOI: 10.3390/jcm8040515
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Drug interactions. MTX, methotrexate.
| Interactions | Source of Interactions |
|---|---|
| Increase MTX levels |
Allopurinol, triamterene Decrease renal MTX clearance: ciprofloxacin, cephalothin, penicillin, probenecid, sulfonamides Decrease MTX excretion: diuretics, proton pump inhibitors Increase MTX reabsorption by the kidney tubule: probenecid |
| Decrease MTX levels |
Decrease intestinal absorption of MTX: chloramphenicol, tetracyclines |
| Increase the risk of bone marrow suppression |
Chloramphenicol, co-trimoxazole, pyrimethamine, sulfonamides, trimethoprine-sulfamethoxazole |
| Increase liver toxicity |
Alcohol, leflunomide |
Preparation of MTX therapy.
| Diagnosis of rheumatoid/inflammatory arthritis and/or need for treatment |
| Diagnosis of chronic kidney or liver diseases |
| Assessment of cardiovascular risks |
| Assessment of a neoplastic disease |
| Discussion on smoking habits and the advantage of smoking cessation |
| Evaluation/judging of depression and resilience/coping strategies |
| Assessment of anemia, leukopenia, or thrombocytopenia |
| Documentation of concomitant drug therapy |
| Defining therapeutic aim |
| Shared decision making with the patient |
| Evaluation of alcohol-consumption |
| Diagnosis of active/chronic infection with herpes zoster, tuberculosis, hepatitis, HIV, relevant fungal infection |
| Diagnosis of immunodeficiency |
| Documentation of vaccination status |
| Consider testing for tuberculosis |
| Anticonception/assessing wish of conception/family planning |
Key points patients will need to be counselled about when rheumatologists adopt a shared decision-making approach to the recommended regime. NSAIDs, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.
| Topics to Discuss with Patients |
|---|
| • The choice of routes of administration and the advantages of each |
| • Expected time to experiencing benefits (this is very important as a patient may experience transient tolerability problems such as nausea prior to experiencing and improvement in symptoms and there will therefore be a danger of non-adherence if there has not been appropriate counselling) |
| • Potential toxicities with reassurance about the capability to mitigate these risks through regular and appropriate blood monitoring |
| • The potential tolerability issues, especially nausea with appropriate reassurance that this can be lessened or mitigated with use of folic acid supplementation or parenteral administration |
| • Women of childbearing potential need to be counselled about pregnancy and family planning. |
| • Vaccinations and how to ensure optimum outcomes of vaccination |
| • Alcohol consumption |
| • Interactions between MTX and other medication with particular advice about NSAIDs |
Key recommendations for clinical use of MTX. csDMARD, conventional synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs; bDMARDs, biological DMARDs; tsDMARDs, targeted synthetic DMARDs; SC, subcutaneous.
| Key Points for Clinical Use of MTX |
|---|
|
|
| Encourage smoking cessation |
| Limit alcohol consumption |
| Ensure appropriate education on how to optimise outcomes |
| Manage anxiety and depression |
|
|
| Generally 10–15 mg/week, but should be personalized |
| Choose between oral and parenteral route. |
|
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| Titrate dose according to individual clinical response |
| Switch to SC route for doses higher than 15 mg/week to enhance MTX bioavailability |
|
|
| Start folic acid supplementation at a dose of at least 5 mg/week and up to 5 mg/day other than the day of methotrexate (or folinic acid at a dose lower than 7.5 mg/week) |
| Instruct the patient to not take folic acid on the day of MTX administration |
| Folinic acid should be administered on a weekly basis the day after MTX administration |
| Counsel patients about risk mitigation through blood monitoring according to local protocols |
|
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| Instruct the patients to seek advice from their rheumatologist about compatibility with methotrexate of self-medicated drugs or drugs prescribed by another physician |
|
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| Diminish gastrointestinal side effects by switching to SC route |
|
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| Enhance MTX bioavailability by splitting oral dose or switching to SC route |
| Consider combination with csDMARD, bDMARDs or tsDMARDs |
|
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| Use intra-articular or systemic glucocorticoids as bridging therapies |
| Educate the patient and adopt a shared decision-making approach |