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Perioperative management of patients with inflammatory rheumatic diseases Updated recommendations of the German Society for Rheumatology

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ZEITSCHRIFT FUR RHEUMATOLOGIE
卷 82, 期 SUPPL 1, 页码 1-11

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SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00393-021-01150-9

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Operation; Glucocorticoids; Disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs; Biologics; Infection risk

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This study provides updated recommendations on the use of anti-inflammatory medication for patients with inflammatory rheumatic diseases prior to surgery. The recommendations cover glucocorticoids, conventional synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs, biologics, and newer drugs and targeted synthetic DMARDs. The study highlights the importance of reducing glucocorticoid dose before surgery and suggests specific guidelines for different medications.
Background Prior to surgical interventions physicians and patients with inflammatory rheumatic diseases remain concerned about interrupting or continuing anti-inflammatory medication. For this reason, the German Society for Rheumatology has updated its recommendations from 2014. Methods After a systematic literature search including publications up to 31 August 2021, the recommendations on the use of of glucocorticoids, conventional synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (csDMARDs) and biologics (bDMARDs) were revised and recommendations on newer drugs and targeted synthetic (ts)DMARDs were added. Results The glucocorticoid dose should be reduced to as low as possible 2-3 months before elective surgery (in any case <10 mg/day) but should be kept stable 1-2 weeks before and on the day of surgery. In many cases csDMARDs can be continued, exceptions being a reduction of high methotrexate doses to <= 15 mg/week and wash-out of leflunomide if there is a high risk of infection. Azathioprine, mycophenolate and ciclosporin should be paused 1-2 days prior to surgery. Under bDMARDs surgery can be scheduled for the end of each treatment interval. For major interventions Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors should be paused for 3-4 days. Apremilast can be continued. If interruption is necessary, treatment should be restarted as soon as possible for all substances, depending on wound healing. Conclusion Whether bDMARDs increase the perioperative risk of infection and the benefits and risks of discontinuation remain unclear based on the currently available evidence. To minimize the risk of a disease relapse under longer treatment pauses, in the updated recommendations the perioperative interruption of bDMARDs was reduced from at least two half-lives to one treatment interval.

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