Title: Immunosuppressive Therapy in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
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2Immunosuppressive Therapy in Systemic Lupus
Erythematosus
- Jim Oates, MD
- Associate Professor of Medicine
- Department of Medicine
- Division of Rheumatology
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4Outline
- Lupus
- Definition
- Levels of disease severity
- Therapies
- Individual medications
- Mechanism
- Dosing
- Toxicity
- Monitoring
5Lupus
- Systemic autoimmune disease manifested by
- Autoantibody production
- End organ inflammatory disease from
autoantibodies - Taylor therapy to the most severe organ
involvement - Therapy is long term (years)
6Malar rash Oxford Textbook of Rheumatology 3rd
edition
7Mild disease
- Mild photosensitive lesions
- SPF 30 or greater
- Avoid sun/cover skin with SPF clothing
- Hydroxychloroquine
- Arthralgias, mild arthritis
- Hydroxychloroquine
- Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs)
8Discoid lesions Oxford Textbook of
Rheumatology 3rd edition
9Refractory Skin Disease
- Discoid lesions, bullous lesions, severe
maculopapular lesions - Topical or intralesional corticosteroids
- Topical tacrolimus
- Mycophenolate mofetil
- Azathioprine
- Dapsone
10Serositis
- Pleuritis, Pericarditis, Arthritis
- Treatment advanced with symptoms
- NSAIDs
- Corticosteroids
- Steroid sparing agents
- Methotrexate
- mycophenolate mofetil
- azathioprine
11Ed Friedlander, M.D., http//www.pathguy.com/lectu
res/bad_lupus.jpg
12Severe Disease
- Vasculitis, nephritis, CNS vasculitis or
vasculopathy, hemorrhagic alveolitis - Pulse 15 mg/kg/day methylprednisolone
- Induction agents
- Cyclophosphamide
- Mycophenolate mofetil
- Plasmapheresis for life threatening acute disease
(hemorrhagic alveolitis)
13Severe disease
- Maintenance therapies (once remission induced)
- Mycophenolate mofetil
- Azathioprine
14Refractory Disease
- Rituximab
- IV human immune globulin
15Hydroxychloroquine (Plaquenil)
- ?-hydroxylated chloroquine
- Less ocular toxicity than chloroquine
- Originally used to treat malaria, later found
effective in rheumatoid arthritis and lupus - Concentrates in lysosomes and has
anti-inflammatory properties
Seo P. Therapies. In Current Rheumatology.
Imboden J. ed. McGraw Hill 2004.
16Hydroxychloroquine (Plaquenil)pharmacology
- GI absorption 74
- High uptake in melanin-containing tissues
- Epidermis
- Retina
- Metabolized by the liver
- Excretion via the kidney
- t½ 50 days (measurable in urine after 2-4 months)
Seo P. Therapies. In Current Rheumatology.
Imboden J. ed. McGraw Hill 2004.
17Hydroxychloroquine (Plaquenil)dosing
- 200 mg daily x 1 week
- Increase to 200 mg twice daily after 1 week
- Reduces GI disturbances (diarrhea, nausea), which
are self limited (2 weeks) - Does not appear to reduce headache (rare)
Seo P. Therapies. In Current Rheumatology.
Imboden J. ed. McGraw Hill 2004.
18Hydroxychloroquine (Plaquenil)toxicity
- Retinal
- Baseline ocular examination and CMP
- If normal, no screening
- Annual screening if dose 6.5 mg/kg/day or
baseline exam abnormal or liver/renal impairment - Color vision, peripheral vision (Amsler grid),
retinal exam - GI
Levy GD, et al. Arthritis Rheum.
1997401482-6. Buckley R. Eye 1998 12907
19Azathioprine (Imuran, Azasan)
- Inhibits purine metabolism via metabolite
6-mercaptopurine (6-MP) - Metabolized to 6-MP by red cell glutathione
- 6-MP metabolized by xanthine oxidase and
thiopurine methyltransferase (TPMT) - Co-administration with allopurinol
contraindicated - Screen for TPMT deficiency (0.3 of population)
- t½ 3 hours
Seo P. Therapies. In Current Rheumatology.
Imboden J. ed. McGraw Hill 2004.
20Azathioprine (Imuran, Azasan)dosing and
monitoring
- Typical final dose 2 mg/kg/day given PO in AM
- Starting dose 50 mg PO daily
- Advance dose (25 mg) q 7-14d after CBC confirmed
normal - Once at final dose, CBC every 4-6 weeks
Seo P. Therapies. In Current Rheumatology.
Imboden J. ed. McGraw Hill 2004.
21Azathioprine (Imuran, Azasan)Toxicity
- GI toxicity limiting in some
- Rare hepatitis or pancreatitis
- Rare hypersensitivity reaction in first weeks
- fever, rash, myalgias, liver function test
abnormalities, gastrointestinal symptoms, and
hypotension - Immune suppression live vaccine
contraindicated, influenza/pneumococcal vaccine
encouraged - Lymphoma
Seo P. Therapies. In Current Rheumatology.
Imboden J. ed. McGraw Hill 2004.
22Mycophenolate Mofetil (CellCept)
- Inhibits inosine monophosphate (IMP)
dehydrogenase and thus purine synthesis - Results in reduced B and T lymphocyte
proliferation and antibody production - Hydrolyzed to mycophenolic acid in GI tract
- t½ 12 hours
- Liver metabolism, clearance of inactive
metabolite in urine and feces
Seo P. Therapies. In Current Rheumatology.
Imboden J. ed. McGraw Hill 2004.
23Mycophenolate Mofetil (CellCept)Dosing
- 1.5-3g daily given BID to TID
- Up to 25 better absorption if given on empty
stomach - Antacids reduce absorption
- Initiate with 500 mg PO daily or twice daily
- Evaluate for marrow toxicity (CBC)
- May promote GI tolerance
- TID QID dosing better tolerated
Seo P. Therapies. In Current Rheumatology.
Imboden J. ed. McGraw Hill 2004.
24Mycophenolate Mofetil (CellCept)Monitoring and
Dose Increase
- After initial dose, CBC every 1-2 weeks as
increase dose by 500 mg each time to final dose - Monitor CBC every 4-6 weeks thereafter
Seo P. Therapies. In Current Rheumatology.
Imboden J. ed. McGraw Hill 2004.
25Mycophenolate Mofetil (CellCept)Toxicity
- Immunosuppression live vaccine contraindicated
while influenza and pneumococcal vaccine
indicated - Marrow toxicity
- GI toxicity
- May be teratogenic
- Reduces blood levels of oral contraceptives
- ? Increased lymphoma risk
Seo P. Therapies. In Current Rheumatology.
Imboden J. ed. McGraw Hill 2004.
26Mycophenolate Mofetil (CellCept)Tricks for dosing
- GI side effects less if taken with food
- Mycophenolic acid (Myfortic) better tolerated
(360 mg dose equivalent to 500 mg of
mycophenolate mofetil)
Seo P. Therapies. In Current Rheumatology.
Imboden J. ed. McGraw Hill 2004.
27Cyclophosphamide (Cytoxan)
- Alkylating agent
- Depletes B and T cells
- Liver metabolism to
- 4-hydroxycyclophosphamide
- Aldophosphoramide
- phosphoramide mustard (active ingredient)
- acrolein (bladder toxicity)
- Renal excretion within 48 hours
Seo P. Therapies. In Current Rheumatology.
Imboden J. ed. McGraw Hill 2004.
28Cyclophosphamide (Cytoxan)Toxicity
- Infiltration causes extensive tissue necrosis
- Hemorrhagic cystitis and bladder cancer
- Immunosuppression opportunistic infection
- Live vaccine contraindicated
- Pneumococcal and influenza vaccine indicated
- Hematopoietic malignancy (rare)
- Infertility (common)
Seo P. Therapies. In Current Rheumatology.
Imboden J. ed. McGraw Hill 2004.
29Cyclophosphamide (Cytoxan)Toxicity
- Hepatitis with cholestasis (rare)
- Pneumonitis (rare)
- Hypersensitivity (rare)
- GI toxicity (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea common)
- Alopecia (common)
- Teratogenic
Seo P. Therapies. In Current Rheumatology.
Imboden J. ed. McGraw Hill 2004.
30Cyclophosphamide (Cytoxan)Infertility planning
- Gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist Lupron
Depot 3.75 mg IM 10 days before each dose for
women - Sperm banking for men
31Cyclophosphamide (Cytoxan)Dosing for pulse IV
therapy
- Initiated at 750 mg/m2, dose reduced for reduced
renal clearance (mg/m2) - Nadir WBC 7-14 days after dose
- If nadir WBC
- If nadir WBC 4.0 k, increase dose (max 1000
mg/m2) - PCP prophylaxis (trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole
daily) more indicated for oral daily dosing
Seo P. Therapies. In Current Rheumatology.
Imboden J. ed. McGraw Hill 2004.
32Cyclophosphamide (Cytoxan)Protocol for pulse IV
therapy
- Start IV, ensure good venous return
- Mix in 150 mL normal saline or D5W given over 60
min. - MESNA 20 of the CYC immediately before CYC and
every 3 hours for a total of 4 doses. - Dexamethasone 10 mg orally 34 hours after CYC.
- Ondansetron 16 mg IV premed then 8 mg PO q 12
hours x 2-3 days.
Seo P. Therapies. In Current Rheumatology.
Imboden J. ed. McGraw Hill 2004.
33CyclophosphamidePrevention of bladder toxicity
- Hydration with D5 ½ NS at 150200 mL/h for a
total of 24 L. - Drink fluid (2 liters) for the rest of the day
- Bladder irrigation may be used if patient unable
to tolerate intravenous fluids.
Seo P. Therapies. In Current Rheumatology.
Imboden J. ed. McGraw Hill 2004.
34Cyclophosphamide (Cytoxan)Daily Oral Therapy
- Initial dose 50 mg daily in the AM with 1 liter
of fluid (throughout the AM) - Increase every 7-14 days after CBC check
- Final dose 1-2 mg/kg/day
- CBC every 4-6 weeks thereafter
- trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole daily
35Human Immunoglobulin
- Pooled human immune globulin (95 IgG)
- Modulates Fc receptor function, suppresses
antibody synthesis, inhibits complement
activation - t½ 3 weeks after equilibration over 72 hours
- Contraindicated in IgA deficiency
36Human Immunoglobulincomplications
- Anaphylaxis (greater if IgA deficient)
- Fever, chills, back pain, shortness of breath
(48-72 hours after infusion) - Aseptic meningitis (48-72 hours)
- Increased viscosity and thromboembolism (rare)
37Human ImmunoglobulinAdministration
- 2g/kg total dose either 1g/kg/day x 2d or
0.4g/kg/day x 5d - Reconstitute in D5W or NS (gently swirl, avoid
foaming) over up to 20 minutes - Premedicate with acetaminophen and
diphenhydramine - GI upset with increased infusion rate
38Take home points
- Taylor therapy to most severe end organ disease
(the disease must be worse than the drug) - Monitor for toxicity
- Immunize and monitor for infection
- Initiate steroid sparing agents quickly
- Therapy is long term (years)