Pharmacology: Immunosuppression and disease modifying therapy in rehaumatology Flashcards

1
Q

Give some examples of diseases managed by rheumatology

A
  • Rheumatoid arthritis
  • Systemic lupus erythematosus (severe joint pain, malar rash on face, headaches, raynauds)
  • Systemic vasculitis
  • Systemic sclerosis (excess production of collagen in the CT, affects skin, blood vessels, joints, etc)
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2
Q

What is the pathology of rheumatoid arthritis?

A

Initially localised to the synovium which thickens (then called a pannus). The pannus releases lots of cytokines causing inflammation and damage to the cartilage and bone.

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3
Q

What is the target for dugs treating rheumatoid arthritis?

A

The pro-inflammatory cytokines eg IL-1 inhibitors, TNF inhibitors

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4
Q

How is rheumatoid arthritis diagnosed?

A
  • morning stiffness lasting more than 30mins (the longer the stiffness the more significant)
  • arthritis of 3 or more joints (small joints)
  • symmetrical arthritis
  • rheumatoid nodules (late stage and shouldnt be left that long)
  • xray changes (shouldnt be left til that stage but may see some)
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5
Q

Whats the difference between arthritis and arthralgia?

A

Arthritis is joint pain with swelling

Arthralgia is joint pain without swelling

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6
Q

What is the mechanism of action of corticosteroids?

A

They inhibit all stages of T cell activation across all systems - therefore they have lots of side effects
Prevent IL-1 and IL6 production by macrophages

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7
Q

List some common side effects of steroids

A
  • cataracts
  • hypertension
  • immunocompromised
  • peptic ulcers
  • osteoporosis
  • weight gain
  • increased body hair
  • easy bruising
  • thinning of the skin
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8
Q

What is azathioprine used for in practice?

A

An immunosuppressant used to treat:

  • lupus and vasculitis (v effectice)
  • RA but weak evidence
  • IBD in severe cases
  • atopic dermatitis
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9
Q

What is a ‘steroid sparing drug’? Give some examples

A

A medication that allows the stopping of steroids early to avoid side effects
eg Azathioprine, methotrexate

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10
Q

What is the mechanism of action of azathioprine?

A

It is broken down by the TPMT enzyme, the action of the metabolites is to inhibit purine and therefore DNA and RNA synthesis
(Individuals low in TMPT are at risk of myelosupression so need to test TMPT levels before prescribing)

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11
Q

What are side effects of immunosuppressants?

A
  • Myelosuppression is the main concern (need regular blood tests to monitor)
  • Increased risk of malignancy
  • Increased risk of infection
  • Hepatitis
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12
Q

Name some calcineurin inhibitors

A

Ciclosporin and tacrolimus

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13
Q

What are some uses for calcineurin inhibitors?

A
  • widely used in transplantation
  • atopic dermatitis
  • severe psoriasis
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14
Q

What are the risks of ciclosporin?

A

Can cause renal toxicity
Raised potassium
Hypertension
Lots of drug interaction (CYP P450)

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15
Q

What is the mechanism of action of calcineurin inhibitors?

A

Inhibit T helper cells (needed to communicate with B cells) which prevents production of IL2

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16
Q

What is mycophenolate used to treat?

A
  • primarily transplantation (but needs to be well monitored for risk of myelosuppression)
  • good efficacy for treating new onset lupus
17
Q

What is the mechanism of action of mycophenolate?

A

Inhibits B cell and T cell proliferations selectively

Spares other rapidly dividing cells - more accurate rather than steroids

18
Q

What is cyclophosphamide used for?

A
  • initially chemotherapy for solid cancers, lymphomas and leukaemias
  • found to also treat lupus
  • vasculitis
    (quickest acting drug - starts to work in 10 days vs 4-6weeks)
19
Q

How does cyclophosphamide work?

A

Cross links DNA to prevent replication

Suppresses both B and T cell activity

20
Q

What are the side effects of cyclophosphamide?

A
  • one of the metabolites causes haemorrhagic cystitis of the bladder therefore need to give with mesna to bind up the metabolite and encourage drinking lots of water
  • increases risk of bladder cancers long term
  • infertility (doses changing so becoming less of an issue, but still 10-25%) may offer to freeze the eggs to have IVF
21
Q

What is methotrexate used to treat?

A
  • v high doses for malignancy
  • gold standard for RA
  • psoriasis
  • crohns disease
    Unlicensed: myopathies, steroid sparing in asthma
22
Q

What is the mechanism of action of methotrexate in malignancy?

A

Inhibits dihydrofolate reductase (competes against folate)

Inhibits the s phase of the cell cycle - cytotoxic to rapidly dividing cells such as malignany, GI mucosa

23
Q

What is the mechanism of action of methotrexate in non malignant diseases?

A

Mechanism not clear, but it is NOT via anti-folate action like it is in malignancy.

24
Q

What are the methods of administering methotrexate?

A

Orally - oral bioavailability is 35%
IM - bioavailability is 75%
Sub cutaneous - used if they cannot tolerate oral eg nausea aside effects

25
Q

What is the frequency of dose of methotrexate?

A

Weekly
SHOULD NEVER BE GIVEN DAILY - this is because the drug undergoes extensive metabolism and the metabolites have a long half life. Daily dosing would result in toxicitiy

26
Q

What are the adverse effects of methotrexate?

A
  • mucositis
  • marrow suppression
    (above only need folic acid to avoid so prescribe alongside)
  • hepatitis, cirrhosis
  • pneumonitis
  • infection
  • HIGHLY TERATOGENIC AND ABORTIFACIENT (because it is a folic acid antagonist)
27
Q

What is sulfasalazine used to treat?

A

Rheumatoid arthritis

28
Q

What are the immunological effects of sulfasalazine?

A

T cells: inhibits proliferation, possible apoptosis, inhibits IL2 synthesis
Neutrophils: reduced chemotaxis, reduced degranulation

29
Q

What are the side effects of sulfasalazine?

A

Usually only in the first few weeks then resolve

  • myelosuppression
  • hepatitis
  • rash
  • nausea and vomiting
30
Q

What RA drugs can be used in pregnancy?

A

Sulfasalazine

31
Q

What are biological therapies (generally)?

A

Therapies that have been synthesised using some human DNA eg recombinant DNA technology producing substances nearly identical to bodys own key signalling therapies
Most are mono-clonal antibodies which are made to specifically block any given substance in the body

32
Q

How does anti-TNF therapy work?

Give an example

A

Biological therapy:
Reduce inflammation by inhibiting cytokine release
Decrease joint destruction - less bone erosion, less cartilage breakdown
eg Humira

33
Q

What are the contraindications to anti-TNF therapy?

A

TNFa is needed to resolve TB so TB status must be tested and latent TB treated.
Even after treatment there is a risk of getting TB so patients screened for their TB risk status

34
Q

How does rituximab work?

A

Biological therapy:
Binds to a surface marker on CD20 which is found on a specific subset of B cells, causing apoptosis
Very effective in treating RA by preventing antibody production

35
Q

What is giant cell arteritis?

What are the symptoms?

A

A type of vasculitis where the arteries of the head become inflamed. Patients present with sudden onset severe peri-orbital headache, jaw claudication, malaise.

36
Q

How is giant cell arteritis diagnosed?

A

Temporal artery biopsy

37
Q

What are the complications of giant cell arteritis?

A

Clinical emergency - can get blockage of the opthalmic artery resulting in irreversible blindness.

38
Q

What is the treatment for giant cell arteritis?

A

High dose oral steroids eg 60mg prednisolone
Treatment should be started asap - dont wait for diagnosis. The steroids should be tapered off across 2 years, if they are suddenly stopped there can be adrenal insufficiency.