Literature Review

New steroid dosing regimen for myasthenia gravis


 

FROM JAMA NEUROLOGY

Particularly relevant to late-onset disease

Commenting on the study, Raffi Topakian, MD, Klinikum Wels-Grieskirchen, Wels, Austria, said the results showed that in patients with moderate to severe generalized myasthenia gravis requiring high-dose prednisone, azathioprine, a widely used immunosuppressant, may have a quicker steroid-sparing effect than previously thought, and that rapid steroid tapering can be achieved safely, resulting in a reduction of the cumulative steroid dose over a year despite higher initial doses.

Dr. Topakian, who was not involved with the research, pointed out that the median age was advanced (around 56 years), and the benefit of a regimen that leads to a reduction of the cumulative steroid dose over a year may be disproportionately larger for older, sicker patients with many comorbidities who are at considerably higher risk for a prednisone-induced increase in cardiovascular complications, osteoporotic fractures, and gastrointestinal bleeding.

“The study findings are particularly relevant for the management of late-onset myasthenia gravis (when first symptoms start after age 45-50 years), which is being encountered more frequently over the past years,” he said.

“But the holy grail of myasthenia gravis treatment has not been found yet,” Dr. Topakian noted. “Disappointingly, rapid tapering of steroids (compared to slow tapering) resulted in a reduction of the cumulative steroid dose only, but was not associated with better myasthenia gravis functional status or lower doses of steroids at 15 months. To my view, this finding points to the limited immunosuppressive efficacy of azathioprine.”

He added that the study findings should not be extrapolated to patients with mild presentations or to those with muscle-specific kinase myasthenia gravis.

Dr. Sharshar disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Disclosures for the study coauthors appear in the original article.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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