Pharmacology of Arthritis Flashcards

1
Q

what is the ladder of pain management (WHO)?

A

non-opioids +/- adjuvant
weak opioid for mild-moderate pain +/- non opioid +/- adjuvant
strong opioid (morphine) +/- non-opioids +/- adjuvant

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2
Q

indications for NSAIDs?

A

inflammatory arthriitis
mechanical MSK pain
pleuritic/pericardial pain (connective tissue disease)

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3
Q

NSAIDs side effects?

A

peptic ulceration
renal impairment
increased cardio risk (if taken regularly over long time)
exacerbation of asthma

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4
Q

first line for newly diagnosed rheumatoid arthritis?

A

methotrexate (first line DMARD)

also use steroids in the short term to help symptoms

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5
Q

when should methotrexate be started?

A

within 3 months of symptom onset

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6
Q

next step if RA doesn’t responds to standard DMARD therapy?

A

biological agents

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7
Q

how do DMARDs work?

A

slow acting
only anti inflammatory - no analgesic effect
improve standard ab tests (CRP?ESR)
reduce rate of joint damage

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8
Q

does DMARD therapy need to be monitored?

A

yes

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9
Q

do DMARDs improve pain?

A

no

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10
Q

best treatment method for RA treatment?

A
early intervention (first 3 months)
aggressive treatment
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11
Q

common DMARDs?

A

methotrexate
sulfasalazine
leflunomide
hydroxychloroquine

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12
Q

what is a risk of methotrexate?

A

can cause problems in pregnancy

must stop taking it before 3 months before trying to concieve

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13
Q

how can methotrexate be administered?

A

oral

IV

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14
Q

what is methotrexate?

A

folate antagonist

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15
Q

methotrexate side effects?

A
pneumonitis
low WCC
thrombocytopenia
hepatitis/cirrhosis
rash/mouth ulcers
nausea
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16
Q

which drug is similar to methotrexate?

A

lelflunamide has similar effectiveness and side effects

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17
Q

problem with leflunamide?

A

long half life so has to be washed out

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18
Q

sulfasalazine side effects?

A
nausea
rash/mouth ulcers
neutropenia
hepatitis
reversible oligozoospermia (reduced sperm count)
19
Q

is leflunamide safe in pregnancy?

A

yes

20
Q

what does hydroxychloroquine do?

A

doesn’t have an affect on joint damage

used more in connective tissue disease - lupus

21
Q

targets of biological agents?

A

TNF
CD 20 B cells
interleukin 6
interleukin 17, 12 and 23

22
Q

do biologics work for everyone?

A

no

but generally more effective than DMARDs

23
Q

do biological agents have side effects?

A

yes

24
Q

what is anti TNF used for?

A

RA
psoriatic arthritis
ankylosing spondylitis

25
Q

how is anti TNF given?

A

sub cutaneous injection

26
Q

examples if anti TNF?

A

etanercept
infliximab
adalinumab

27
Q

criteria for anti TNF use?

A

DAS28 >5.1

use of previous standard DMARDs

28
Q

side effects of anti TNF?

A

re-activation of latent TB
increased infection risk
increases skin cancer risk (only slightly)
exacerbate heart failure (contraindicated if patient has severe heart failure)

29
Q

does anti TNF cause foetal abnormalities?

A

no

therefore safe n pregnancy

30
Q

does inflammatory/rheumatoid arthritis improve or worsen in pregnancy?

A

improve generally

31
Q

what are the 2 components of gout treatment?

A

treat acute flare

gout attack prophylaxis

32
Q

what is not used during a flare of gout?

A

allopurinol

33
Q

if someone is already on allopurinol and has a flare, do you stop it?

A

no

34
Q

other gout medications

A

naproxen
colchicine
prednisolone
intramuscular steroid

35
Q

treatment for actute episode of gout?

A

colchicine
NSAIDs
steroids

36
Q

gout prophylaxis?

A

lower urate

  • allopurinol (first line)
  • febuxostat (used if theres renal failure?)
  • uricosurics
37
Q

what is allopurinol side effcts?

A

rash (vasculitis) - common in elderly and if theres renal failure
azathioprine interaction - can suppress bone marrow
rarely causes marrow aplasia

38
Q

what is used if allopurinol not tolerated (e.g renal failure)?

A

febuxostat

39
Q

goal for urate?

A

<360 micro moles per litre

- always monitor during treatment

40
Q

how long should steroids be used?

A

as short a time as possible

41
Q

side effects of steroids?

A
loss of bone density (osteoporosis risk)
can contribute to diabetes development
can cause weight gain (mainly oral if over long time)
muscle wasting
skin atrophy
42
Q

how can steroid risk be reduced?

A

use for short time
use lowest dose possible
consider steroid sparing agents
prophylaxis for osteoporosis

43
Q

possible cause of cough and breathlessness with bilateral crackles 12 weeks after starting methotrexate?

A

methotrexate pneumonitis

  • due to quick onset
  • could have been pulmonary fibrosis if over years of treatment
44
Q

what other DMARD could you use instead of methotrexate if trying to conceive?

A

sulfasalazine

- must be off methotrexate for 3 months before conceiving