Swiss Medical Weekly (Apr 2023)

Management of giant-cell arteritis in Switzerland: an online national survey

  • Michele Iudici,
  • Andrea Katharina Hemmig,
  • Mihaela Stegert,
  • Courvoisier Courvoisier,
  • Sabine Adler,
  • Mike Oliver Becker,
  • Christoph T. Berger,
  • Diana Dan,
  • Axel Finckh,
  • Alfred Mahr,
  • Thomas Neumann,
  • Stephan Reichenbach,
  • Camillo Ribi,
  • Luca Seitz,
  • Peter Villiger,
  • Lukas Wildi,
  • Thomas Daikeler,
  • on behalf of Giant Cell Arteritis SCQM Study Group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.57187/smw.2023.40051
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 153, no. 4

Abstract

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AIMS OF THE STUDY: To assess current practices in diagnosing, treating, and following-up giant-cell arteritis by specialists in Switzerland and to identify the main barriers to using diagnostic tools. METHODS: We performed a national survey of specialists potentially caring for patients with giant-cell arteritis. The survey was sent by email to all members of the Swiss Societies of Rheumatology and for Allergy and Immunology. A reminder was sent to nonresponders after 4 and 12 weeks. Its questions covered the following dimensions: respondents’ main characteristics, diagnosis, treatment, and imaging’s role during follow-up. The main study results were summarized using descriptive statistics. RESULTS: Ninety-one specialists, primarily aged 46–65 years (n = 53/89; 59%), working in academic or nonacademic hospitals or private practice, and treating a median of 7.5 (interquartile range [IQR]: 3–12) patients with giant-cell arteritis per year participated in this survey. Ultrasound of temporal arteries/large vessels (n = 75/90; 83%) and positron-emission-tomography-computed tomography (n = 52/91; 57%) or magnetic resonance imaging (n = 46/90; 51%) of the aorta/extracranial arteries were the most common techniques used to diagnose giant-cell arteritis with cranial or large vessel involvement, respectively. Most participants reported a short time to obtain imaging tests or arterial biopsy. The glucocorticoid tapering scheme, glucocorticoid-sparing agent, and glucocorticoid-sparing treatment duration varied among the participants. Most physicians did not follow a predefined repeat imaging scheme for follow-up and mainly relied on structural changes (vascular thickening, stenosis, or dilatation) to drive treatment choice. CONCLUSIONS: This survey indicates that imaging and temporal biopsy are rapidly accessible for diagnosing giant-cell arteritis in Switzerland but highlights heterogeneous practice in many disease management areas.