Immunosuppressive Therapy Flashcards

1
Q

What are the main indications for starting immunosuppressive therapy?

A

For primary/idiopathic immune mediated disease
- for secondary, may or may not use it depending on underlying disease pathology

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2
Q

What is the mainstay of therapy for immune mediated disease? What are the secondary drugs used?

A

Primary: Glucocorticoids- prednisone, dexamethasone
Secondary: azathioprine, cyclosporine, chlorambucil, leflunomide, mycophenolate mofetil

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3
Q

What adjunctive therapies may be used in cases of immune mediated disease?

A

Human IVIG, Vincristine, Melatonin

Supportive: blood products, antiplatelet therapy

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4
Q

What are the factors that impact the selection of immunosuppressive therapy?

A
  1. Expected course and prognosis of disease
  2. Concurrent diseases
  3. Safety and efficacy
  4. Ease of administration- client compliance
  5. Cost
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5
Q

Describe the use of glucocorticoids for immunosuppression

A

They are a first line therapy: effective, relatively rapid onset (7-10 days) and cheap

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6
Q

What are the major side effects seen with glucocorticoids?

A
  • PUPD, panting, polyphagia (will see this decreased with dose decreases)
  • muscle atrophy and weakness
  • iatrogenic hyperadrenocorticism
  • vacuolar hepatopathy (cholestatic liver pattern- with ALP elevations much higher than ALT)
  • infections, sepsis
  • GI ulceration (rare)
  • hypercoagulability (unsure of mechanism)
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7
Q

What are some contraindications for glucocorticoids?

A
  • Diabetes mellitus (better to use combo therapies)
  • Infections
  • Hyperadrenocorticism
  • NSAID therapy (if steroids- NSAID use 2 day washout, if NSAID- steroid wait 5-7 days)
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8
Q

How should you dose prednisone and dexamethasone?

A

Prednisone:
-2 mg/kg/day
-dose cap of 60-80 mg/day in large breeds

Dexamethasone: much more potent (10X)
- 0.2-0.3 mg/kg/day (initially)
- dex SP- 3 mg/mL when doing low dose dex test

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9
Q

What is the goal for steroid treatment?

A

Clinical remission (clinical and pathologic signs) at the lowest effective dose
- taper by 25% every 2-4 weeks (with 2 weeks of stability on BW/signs) over 4-6 months
- discontinue or lowest effective dose (once at lowest dose, move to every other day)
- avoid decreasing other medications at the same time
- if relapse, return to original effective dose

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10
Q

When should you consider switching to another therapy when treating immune mediated disease?

A
  • no or poor response
  • excessive side effects
  • long duration of therapy indicated
  • corticosteroids contraindicated
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11
Q

Describe the mechanism of action of azathiaprine

A

Inhibits purine synthesis (DNA) which disrupts lymphocyte proliferation, blocks T cell activation and promotes T cell apoptosis, decreases antibody synthesis

Metabolism limits its use in cats- can lead to very severe myelosuppression

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12
Q

What are the main side effects seen with azathiaprine?

A

-Cytopenias (develop over 2-3 months)
-hepatotoxicity (develops in 1-4 weeks)
-chronic subclinical anemia (PCV >25-30%)
-GI signs- mild and self limiting

Monitoring with CBC and chem is crucial

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13
Q

Describe the hepatotoxicity that can be seen with azathioprine

A

-increases are hard to interpret as patients are also often on concurrent prednisone
-if you start to see more increases in ALT over ALP and increased bilirubin, this is more of a concern that this drug is causing liver toxicity
-most cases are reversible with dose reduction (50%)
-discontinue when you see hyperbilirubinemia
-SAM-e can help prevent and/or reverse hepatotoxicity

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14
Q

What are the main indications for azathioprine?

A

Second line therapy for IMTP, IMHA, IMPA, IBD, SLE
- has glucocorticoid sparing effects (decreases steroid side effects)
- previously was second line agent of choice for IMHA (has been determined that any second line drug is ok)

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15
Q

How do you dose azathioprine?

A

Dose 2 mg/kg q24 hours for 2 weeks
- then decrease to 2 mg/kg q 48 hours
- slow onset
- cheap
- taper after prednisone has been tapered over 2-3 months

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16
Q

How is the mechanism of action of cyclosporine different than other immunosuppressives?

A

It does not interfere with lymphocyte proliferation, but instead impairs the function of the T cells, thus blunting the immune response
- aka no myelosuppression

17
Q

What is one of the main things you need to consider if reaching for cyclosporine in a case?

A

It has LOTS of drug interactions
- need to check that there are no interactions with any other drug the patient is taking
- antifungals are a big one that interacts with this drug

18
Q

What are the main side effects seen with cyclosporine?

A

-primarily GI side effects
- can see hepatotoxicity and nephrotoxicity
-gingival hyperplasia, hypertrichosis, excessive shedding, papillomatous, opportunistic infection (especially fungal infections- often very severe)
-can activate platelets (avoid in IMHA)

NO MYELOSUPPRESSION

19
Q

What should you do if you see a skin lesion form on a patient on cyclosporine?

A

Do cytology or biopsy to determine if fungal infection
- if so, stop med entirely or switch to something else

20
Q

What are some indications for cyclosporine?

A

IMHA< ITP, IBD, MG, MUE< GN, anal furunculosis, pemphigus foliaceous
-onset of action over days to months
-chronic inflammatory dose 5 mg/kg/day
-acute life-threatening dose: 5-10 mg/kg q 12 h

21
Q

Why is therapeutic drug monitoring often necessary when on cyclosporine?

A

The same dose may have different effects in different patients

22
Q

What is the recommended formulation of cyclosporine?

A

Microemulsion form- improves bioavailability
- oil based is not recommended- high variability in bioavailability
- be cautious with generics

ATOPICA is the common name brand used- comes in capsules and oral suspension

23
Q

Describe the use of chlorambucil in vet med

A
  • it is an alkylating antineoplastic agent
  • targets B cells (stops proliferation)
  • slow onset of action (about 2 weeks)
    -can be very expensive (often need to get compounded)
  • Used mostly in cats for IBD, PLE or glomerulonephritis
  • used for chronic protein losing enteropathies in dogs
24
Q

What are the main side effects associated with chlorambucil?

A

GI effects in cats, myelosuppression (dose dependent- monitor CBC), alopecia and poor hair growth (especially in beagles), neuro signs in cats

25
Q

Describe the use of leflunomide in vet med

A

-it inhibits B and T cell function and proliferation and suppresses antibody production
-well tolerated
-side effects: GI, myelosuppression, cutaneous drug reactions, hepatotoxicity
-must monitor CBC and chem over time (specifically ALT)
-main uses are for add on or stand-alone therapy for immune mediated polyarthritis, IMHA, ITP, MUE, histiocytosis, pemphigus, colorectal polyps
- dose 2 mg/kg PO q 24h

26
Q

Why is mycophenolate mofetil considered the “more friendly” azathioprine?

A

Same mechanism of action with less side effects
- still can see GI upset at very high doses
- there are some drug interactions with fluroquinolones, metronidazole, PPIs, glucocorticoids, cyclosporine and azathioprine

27
Q

When has mycophenolate been used successfully as a standalone therapy?

A

ITP, IMHA

28
Q

What are some of the main considerations when using mycophenolate?

A
  • dosed at 10 mg/kg PO BID
  • dosing is easier and cheaper for large breed dogs
  • there is an oral suspension and IV formulation
  • can take 2-3 weeks to start working
  • can be used stand alone or in refractory/relapsing disease