53 research outputs found

    Improvement of Arterial Wall Lesions in Parallel with Decrease of Plasma Pentraxin-3 Levels in a Patient with Refractory Takayasu Arteritis after Treatment with Tocilizumab

    Get PDF
    A 19-year-old Japanese woman with active Takayasu arteritis despite multiple conventional immunosuppressive therapies with glucocorticoids in combination with intravenous cyclophosphamide, azathioprine, or infliximab with methotrexate and tacrolimus was successfully treated by switching from infliximab to intravenous tocilizumab. Worsening of claudication of the legs and elevated acute phase reactants, including plasma pentraxin-3 levels, were observed during combination therapy with infliximab. Computed tomography demonstrated increased wall thickening with contrast enhancement in the preexisting lesion of the descending aorta and the femoral arteries. After switching from infliximab to tocilizumab, plasma pentraxin-3 levels gradually decreased to the normal range in parallel with the improvement of claudication. Follow-up computed tomographic scans confirmed the marked improvement of these arterial lesions. Moreover, plasma pentraxin-3 level was increased in response to the worsening of claudication that occurred just after switching to a subcutaneous tocilizumab injection. Measurements of plasma pentraxin-3 might be useful for evaluation of the vascular wall inflammation and therapeutic efficacy even during biologic therapy targeting tumor necrosis factor α and interleukin-6

    Successful cessation of tumor necrosis factor inhibitor treatment in rheumatoid arthritis patients and potential predictors for early flare: An observational study in routine clinical care

    No full text
    Objectives: To investigate the prevalence and the consequence of tumor necrosis factor inhibitor (TNFi) cessation after clinical improvement in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients in clinical practice and predictors of flare after TNFi cessation. Methods: We retrospectively assessed the prevalence of TNFi cessation after achieving sustained improvement, disease flare and joint damage progression after TNFi cessation in consecutive RA patients who started TNFi due to insufficient response to methotrexate were studied. Predictors for flare after TNFi cessation were investigated using Cox regression analysis. Results: In 135 patients who started TNFi with methotrexate, 95 stopped TNFi after sustained improvement and continued methotrexate thereafter. Over 1 year, 33 patients had a flare and 26 restarted TNFi therapy. In 78 patients whose radiographs adequate for evaluation were available, 73 did not exhibit joint damage progression. Female gender, smoking, the interval from starting methotrexate to starting TNFi of more than 9 months and glucocorticoid use at starting TNFi were independently associated with shorter time to flare. Conclusion: Sixty-five percent of patients were successfully discontinued TNFi over 1 year. Radiographic joint damage progression was rare. Early intervention with TNF inhibitor may contribute to successful TNF inhibitor cessation in patients with insufficient response to methotrexate.Key messageSuccessful TNF inhibitor cessation is achievable in two-third of RA patients after achieving sustained remission.Female gender and smoking may predispose to flare after TNF inhibitor cessation.Early intervention with TNF inhibitor may contribute to successful TNF inhibitor cessation. Successful TNF inhibitor cessation is achievable in two-third of RA patients after achieving sustained remission. Female gender and smoking may predispose to flare after TNF inhibitor cessation. Early intervention with TNF inhibitor may contribute to successful TNF inhibitor cessation.</p

    Successful Use of Higher-Dose Etanercept for Multirefractory Systemic Flare of Adult-Onset Still&apos;s Disease with Liver Failure with No Response to Tocilizumab Therapy

    No full text
    A 21-year-old woman with refractory systemic flare of adult-onset Still&apos;s disease with liver failure despite high-dose corticosteroids, cyclosporine, tacrolimus, and tocilizumab, was successfully treated with additional use of etanercept. Etanercept at a dose of 50 mg weekly was partially effective but could not reduce the dose of concomitant betamethasone from 5 mg/day. Etanercept at a dose of 75 mg weekly could lead her to clinical remission and enabled successful tapering off the corticosteroids and discontinuation of etanercept. Normalization of serum C-reactive protein and interleukin 6 and persistent elevation of serum tumor necrosis factor under the treatment with high-dose corticosteroids and immunosuppressants suggest that tumor necrosis factor was more deeply involved than at least interleukin 6 in the pathogenesis of refractoriness of the disease in this patient, and these findings might be indicative of potential efficacy for adjunctive use of a tumor necrosis factor inhibitor rather than an interleukin 6 inhibitor
    corecore