Journal of Translational Autoimmunity (Jan 2020)

Treatment strategy introducing immunosuppressive drugs with glucocorticoids ab initio or very early in giant cell arteritis: A multicenter retrospective controlled study

  • Luca Quartuccio,
  • Miriam Isola,
  • Dario Bruno,
  • Elena Treppo,
  • Laura Gigante,
  • Francesca Angelotti,
  • Riccardo Capecchi,
  • Gianfranco Vitiello,
  • Elena Cavallaro,
  • Antonio Tavoni,
  • Silvia Laura Bosello,
  • Daniele Cammelli,
  • Salvatore De Vita,
  • Elisa Gremese

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3
p. 100072

Abstract

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Objective: Glucocorticoids (GC) are associated with side effects in giant cell arteritis (GCA). Immunosuppressive therapies (ITs) have given conflicting results in GCA, regarding GC sparing effect. Primary endpoint is to evaluate whether very early introduction of ITs in GCA minimize the rate of GC-induced adverse events, in terms of infections, new onset systemic arterial hypertension, GC-induced diabetes and osteoporotic fractures. Methods: A multicenter retrospective case-control study included 165 patients. One group included 114 patients who were treated with at least one IT given at diagnosis or within 3 months from the start of GC. A second group included 51 GCA who received only GC or an IT more than 3 months later. Results: The most frequently used ITs were: methotrexate (138 patients), cyclophosphamide (48 patients) and tocilizumab (27 patients). No difference was observed as concerns the follow-up time between groups [48.5 (IQR 26–72) vs 40 (IQR 24–69), p ​= ​0.3)]. The first group showed a significantly lower incidence of steroid-induced diabetes (8/114, 7% vs 12/51, 23.5%; p ​= ​0.003) and no differences for the rate of infections (p ​= ​0.64). The group was also exposed to lower doses of GC at first (p ​< ​0.0001) and third (p ​< ​0.0001, rank-sum test) month. Forty-four patients in the first group (38.6%) compared with 34 in the second one (66.7%) experienced at least one relapse (p ​= ​0.001). Conclusion: Very early introduction of IT in GCA lowered the incidence of steroid-induced diabetes, possibly due to the lower doses of GC in the first three months. Relapse rate was even lower.

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