From the Journals

Two uveitis treatment options yield similar success


 

FROM JAMA

Approximately two-thirds of adults with uveitis achieved inflammation control after 6 months on either methotrexate or mycophenolate alongside a reduction in corticosteroid use in an international, multicenter, open-label, randomized trial.

“The findings of this trial have implications for clinical practice because they provide scientific justification that mycophenolate mofetil is not more effective than methotrexate as a corticosteroid-sparing immunosuppressive therapy for uveitis,” wrote S.R. Rathinam, MD, PhD, of Aravind Eye Hospital and Postgraduate Institute of Ophthalmology, Madurai, India, and colleagues.

Although corticosteroid therapy is the first-line treatment for uveitis, adverse effects limit long-term use. Mycophenolate mofetil and methotrexate are options for corticosteroid-sparing immunosuppressive therapy for uveitis, but their effectiveness has not been compared until the current study, they said.

In the First-line Antimetabolites as Steroid-sparing Treatment (FAST) trial published Sept. 10 in JAMA, the researchers randomized 216 adults with uveitis (a total of 407 eyes with uveitis) to 25 mg of weekly oral methotrexate or 1.5 g of twice-daily oral mycophenolate mofetil at nine referral eye care centers in India, the United States, Australia, Saudi Arabia, and Mexico; the investigators were masked to the treatment assignment.

Patients with treatment success continued taking their randomized medication for another 6 months. If treatment failed, patients switched to the other antimetabolite with another 6-month follow-up. Overall, 84%-93% in each group had bilateral uveitis. Forty-six patients (21%) had intermediate uveitis only or anterior uveitis and intermediate uveitis, and 170 patients (79%) had posterior uveitis or panuveitis. The median age of the patients was 36 years in the methotrexate group and 41 years in the mycophenolate group; other demographic characteristics were similar between the groups.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Flu vaccine succeeds in TNF inhibitor users
MDedge Rheumatology
Flurry of new anti–IL-17 monoclonal antibodies show efficacy in axSpA
MDedge Rheumatology
After prior TNFi in axSpA, taking secukinumab or another TNFi appear equivalent
MDedge Rheumatology
Hadlima approved as fourth adalimumab biosimilar in U.S.
MDedge Rheumatology
PROMIS tools provide useful data for managing rheumatology patients
MDedge Rheumatology
Criteria found largely interchangeable for classifying radiographic axSpA
MDedge Rheumatology
EULAR updates vaccination recommendations for autoimmune inflammatory rheumatic disease patients
MDedge Rheumatology
FDA approves Taltz for treatment of ankylosing spondylitis
MDedge Rheumatology
Axial SpA guidelines updated with best practices for new drugs, imaging
MDedge Rheumatology
Cannabidiol may interact with rheumatologic drugs
MDedge Rheumatology