| Literature DB >> 33597206 |
Thomas R Riley1, Michael D George2.
Abstract
Immunomodulatory therapy for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) carries risk for infectious complications. Understanding the risks of different therapeutic options is essential for making treatment decisions and appropriately monitoring patients. This review examines data on the risks for serious infections and other key infections of interest for the major classes of agents in use for RA: glucocorticoids, conventional synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs), biologics and Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors. Conventional synthetic DMARDs have an excellent safety profile with recent data available supporting the relative safety of methotrexate. Tumour necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitors are associated with an increase in the risk of serious infections. Risk with other biological agents and with JAK inhibitors varies somewhat but overall appears similar to that of TNF inhibitors, with JAK inhibitors also associated with a greater risk of herpes zoster. Glucocorticoids have a dose-dependent effect on serious infection risk-at higher doses risk of infection with glucocorticoids is substantially greater than with other immunomodulatory therapies, and even low-dose therapy carries a risk of infection that appears to be similar to that of biological therapies. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: arthritis; biological therapy; glucocorticoids; rheumatoid
Year: 2021 PMID: 33597206 PMCID: PMC7893655 DOI: 10.1136/rmdopen-2020-001235
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RMD Open ISSN: 2056-5933
Figure 1Serious infection risk by pharmacological class. Visual depiction of risk of serious infection, with therapies on the right associated with highest risk of serious infection. Differences between various biological therapies and JAK inhibitors are uncertain and likely small. Combination therapy with csDMARDs and biologics appears to have similar risk compared with biological monotherapy. csDMARD, conventional synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drug; GC, glucocorticoids; IL, interleukin; JAK, Janus kinase; TNF, tumour necrosis factor.
Summary of serious infection risk and other infectious considerations by pharmacological class
| Drug | Serious infection risk | Other infection considerations |
| Conventional synthetic DMARDs | Minimal increase in serious infection risk | |
| Abatacept | Possibly slightly lower risk versus TNFi | Herpes zoster |
| Rituximab | Similar or possibly lower risk versus TNFi | Hepatitis B reactivation; |
| TNF inhibitors | 1–2 additional serious infections/100 person-years | Herpes zoster; tuberculosis reactivation |
| Low-dose glucocorticoids (<10 mg/day) | 1–2 additional serious infections/100 person-years | Increased risk for herpes zoster in combination with JAK inhibitors |
| JAK inhibitors | Similar risk versus TNFi | Greater risk of herpes zoster, especially in combination with glucocorticoids |
| IL-6 inhibitors | Similar to slightly higher risk versus TNFi | Herpes zoster |
| High-dose glucocorticoids | Greatest risk for infection (approximately doubles infection risk) | Hepatitis B reactivation; |
Summary of risk of serious infections and other infectious considerations with immunomodulatory therapy.
DMARD, disease-modifying antirheumatic drug; IL, interleukin; JAK, Janus kinase; PML, progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy; TNF, tumour necrosis factor; TNFi, tumour necrosis factor inhibitors.
List of opportunistic infections observed in patients with rheumatoid arthritis on immunosuppressive therapy
| Bacterial | Viral | Fungal | Protozoal |
| Tuberculosis | Disseminated herpes zoster | Cryptosporidium | |
| Non-tuberculous mycobacterium | Cytomegalovirus | Cryptococcosis | Toxoplasmosis |
| Listeria | Invasive herpes simplex virus | Disseminated histoplasmosis | Leishmaniasis |
| Invasive Legionella | JC virus (progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy) | Aspergillosis | |
| BK virus | Coccidioidomycosis | ||
| Epstein-Barr virus | Candidiasis |
Opportunistic infections in patients with RA on immunosuppression, as reported from clinical trials, patient registries and large databases.3 5
JC, John Cunningham virus (human polyomavirus 2); RA, rheumatoid arthritis.