LAS VEGAS – If a patient on a tumor necrosis factor inhibitor such as infliximab or etanercept presents with the signs and symptoms of infection, stop the drug immediately, Dr. Robert Orenstein advised at a dermatology seminar sponsored by the Skin Disease Education Foundation.
“You should do a very aggressive evaluation [because] many of these infections are disseminated at the time they present,” said Dr. Orenstein of the divisions of general internal medicine and infectious diseases at Mayo Medical School, Rochester, Minn. “You should start empiric therapy based upon what you think is going on, and you should withhold the agent until the etiology is completed. Don't use these agents if the patient has an active infection.”
He discussed his approach to patients on a TNF inhibitor who present with these infections:
▸ Mycobacterial infections. Obtain a chest x-ray and a purified protein derivative (of tuberculin) skin test. As with AIDS patients, a 5-mm PPD skin test is considered positive.
“You also want to get an excellent history of exposure, particularly [from] people born in foreign countries or people who are at higher risk because of their profession, before you treat them,” Dr. Orenstein said.
He noted that the QuantiFERON-TB Gold assay, a commercially available blood test, may be “very helpful” in distinguishing patients with nontuberculous infection from those who are positive for Mycobacterium tuberculosis. It takes 24 hours to get the results.
It remains unclear whether treatment of a latent tuberculosis infection needs to be completed before a patient begins taking a TNF inhibitor. “Most of us would argue that we would like to treat tuberculosis first, and after that use the [TNF] agent. But sometimes that's not a possibility. So in general we would recommend at least 1-2 months of treatment before initiating the biologic agent,” he said.
▸ Bacterial infections. The best way to prevent bacterial infections is to make sure these patients get Pneumovax and the influenza vaccines. “You should not give these patients live virus vaccines,” he said. “If someone is traveling and they're on one of these agents, do not give them yellow fever vaccine.”
▸ Viral infections. Make sure these patients are vaccinated for hepatitis A and B. “Eventually we'll have the [human papillomavirus] vaccine and maybe these patients should get that as well once we know how effective that is,” Dr. Orenstein said. “If they're DNA positive for hepatitis B, they should be on treatment for hepatitis B.”
If a patient on a TNF inhibitor presents with disseminated shingles or disseminated herpes simplex, stop the agent. Treat the patient with aggressive antiviral therapy, he added.
The SDEF and this newspaper are wholly owned subsidiaries of Elsevier.