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Category Archive for: ‘Ankylosing Spondylitis’

Spondyloarthritis: a messy, confusing disease

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By Dr Irwin Lim, Rheumatologist

Last weekend, I chaired a session on spondyloarthritis & ankylosing spondylitis.

My 1st task of the day was to remind the attending rheumatologists of the objectives of the meeting.

This was the slide I put up. It’s a slide made by Maxime Dougados, a very eminent rheumatologist.

Concept of SpA

This slides summarises the true story of a French soldier aged 19.

The story (and thanks to @Sam Whittle for telling me this) begins in 1957, when he suffered a triad of problems: urethritis, arthritis & conjunctivitis. Rheumatologists easily recognise this as Reactive Arthritis. Over time however, he suffered much, much more. This included:

  • “amicrobial urethritis”
  • “acute anterior uveitis without obvious aetiology”
  • inflammatory back pain

In 1970, the diagnosis of Ankylosing Spondylitis was made because sacroiliitis was now obvious on the X-rays of his pelvis.

In 1974, he was one of the first HLA-B27 typed patients and was found to be HLA-B27 positive.

Later, he developed psoriasis as well as bouts of peripheral arthritis so he was diagnosed with Psoriatic Arthritis.

Reactive Arthritis, Anterior Uveitis, Ankylosing Spondylitis, Psoriatic Arthritis – all in the same patient.

Is this rather unfortunate patient suffering from 4 different disorders or a single one with different clinical presentations?

What I see is a messy slide representing a messy, confusing, overlapping disease or diseases.

Unfortunately, this describes the typical experience for many patients & the doctors/health professionals trying to make sense of the many different symptoms.

It’s not neat.

And yet, we rheumatologists need to make it easier to help improve diagnosis, management and monitoring of patients with spondyloarthritis.

Why?

Because we have effective treatments

Why?

Because the patients who suffer these diseases & these issues of delayed diagnosis & poor treatment deserve it.

Dr Irwin Lim is a rheumatologist and a director of BJC Health. You should follow him on twitter here.
Arthritis requires an integrated approach. We call this, Connected Care. Contact us.
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Sydney Spondyloarthritis Centre: Update

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SSC_Logo-1By Dr Irwin Lim, Rheumatologist

We started the Sydney Spondyloarthritis Centre at the end of 2011. Sydney didn’t have any specific unit providing a comprehensive approach to patients with these intriguing rheumatic diseases and it was time it did.

For us health professionals working together, it’s an exciting time in the field with many advances in understanding. This has stimulated thinking about faster diagnosis, about how we monitor and manage patients with the diseases better, and it has fostered new treatment development.

I’m reviewing the progress of our service for a talk this weekend.

From January 2012 to April 2013,

  • 130 patients received assessment and treatment
  • 92 of these have the diagnosis of Ankylosing Spondylitis
  • 38 have spondyloarthritis, without X-ray evidence of sacroiliitis
  • 56 of the 92 patients with Ankylosing Spondylitis are on TNF inhibitor therapy

The included patients have been reviewed by a rheumatologist. After this, they are referred to our specific Ankylosing Spondylitis (AS)/ Spondyloarthritis (SpA) physiotherapists, Rachael Butterworth and Jean Redmond.

Rach and Jean then have a lot to get through with the patient, including:

  • Furthering education
  • Metrology (documentation of mobility & disease activity with a bunch of developed measurement indices) including BASDAI, BASMI, BASFI, chest expansion, enthesitis score, & ASDAS (see ASAS site for more details on these)
  • Developing (and/or improving) a regular exercise program
  • Working out specific physiotherapy treatments & exercises to target problems identified in their assessments

The plan is to follow up and monitor the effects of our treatments, both medication and non-medication.

As the AS/SpA patients improve, their treatment has also transitioned to our exercise physiology team, with the aim of gradually stepping up their exercise programs. Regular activity remains an extremely important component of AS/SpA management and we hope to create lasting lifestyle change.

In the last month, Flora, our rheumatology care coordinator, has been involved. Patients getting the initial diagnosis then see Flora for further education and Flora’s role is to be there for the patient. Helping guide them through any difficulties they may have as they negotiate living with the disease and as they negotiate a complicated health system.

I thought it worth updating you. Our Sydney Spondyloarthritis Centre is a work in progress.

I know there are some great Ankylosing Spondylitis/ Spondyloarthritis centres in existence in the public hospital sphere (eg Royal National Hospital for Rheumatic Diseases, Bath & at the Diamantina Institute, Brisbane), but I’m not aware of similar set-ups in a private practice setting.

Are you?

Dr Irwin Lim is a rheumatologist and a director of BJC Health. You should follow him on twitter here.
Arthritis requires an integrated approach. We call this, Connected Care. Contact us.
This blog focuses on arthritis, healthcare in general, and Connected Care. Please subscribe to keep in touch:
 
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Tennis Elbow: sometimes it means more

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Tennis elbowBy Dr Irwin Lim, Rheumatologist

Tennis elbow (or lateral epicondylitis) is common. Chances are you’ve experienced it or know someone who has.

You don’t need to have played tennis. Typically, any repetitive activity straining the forearm extensor muscles can lead to it. It can be quite irritating and can restrict your activities a lot.

Physiotherapists often work on the forearm muscles. The good ones also try to improve the upper limb biomechanics.

GPs often prescribe anti-inflammatory medications or inject corticosteroids (rheumatologists do this too).

Sports doctors & orthopaedic surgeons may inject all sorts of stuff, including PRP (platelet rich plasma) or autologous blood.

Most cases are due to mechanical injury and repeated aggravation, and there is a clear need to avoid the repetitive aggravation.

But, sometimes, it’s a symptom/sign of an underlying disease.

The tennis elbow may be very chronic and hard to treat.  There may be repeated episodes affecting either elbow. Or the person suffering this complaint may be really prone to tendon injury. For example, they may also have suffered patella tendon issues or plantar fasciitis or been told they have heel spurs.

Tendons, and their Entheses, the region where the tendons insert, are a common area affected by spondyloarthritis. Think of Psoriatic Arthritis. Think of Ankylosing Spondylitis.

When faced with recalcitrant and/or widespread tendinopathy or enthesopathy (read Enthesopathy:What’s that?), the rheumatologist will usually cast a wider net, and consider a deeper cause. Many of our patients have spent frustrating months or even years attempting to get their tennis elbow fixed.

Sometimes, it means more that overuse.

Does this change things for you?

Dr Irwin Lim is a rheumatologist and a director of BJC Health. You should follow him on twitter here.
Arthritis requires an integrated approach. We call this, Connected Care. Contact us.
This blog focuses on arthritis, healthcare in general, and Connected Care. Please subscribe to keep in touch:
 
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How is the choice for biologics different for Spondyloarthritis?

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By Dr Irwin Lim, Rheumatologist

Barry from Florida emailed me regarding the post on biologic choice for Rheumatoid Arthritis (link).

He’s kindly agreed to let me quote him as I think it’s informative to answer his questions in this public forum. He writes:

“I have ankylosing spondylitis and crohn’s disease.  After a dozen years of experimentation, I have found the following:

  1. Remicade is very effective for reducing crohn’s related inflammation of my colon, but has no effect on my arthritis pain or stiffness.
  2. Enbrel is very effective for reducing my ankylosing spondylitis stiffness and pain, yet gives no benefit for intestinal inflammation / cramping.

Since I cannot be on two biologics at once, I’ve had to switch back and forth between them, depending on which condition was most debilitating at the time.  This is, of course, a very slow process.  It takes so long for one medication to completely leave my system, and so long for the other to build up in my system that this is nearly impractical to do…………

…..I do believe that colitis or crohn’s is not only the most common condition associated with many types of arthritis, it is also potentially one of the most deadly.  Finding a biologic that is effective for both conditions is my challenge.  I am trying Cimzia at the present time, to see if it is effective for  both conditions.  It took several months before I began to see a benefit, but it is improving my stiffness and pain now.  I am sleeping better at night.  But, it is difficult to establish it’s effectiveness on crohn’s until I go a very extended period without any type of flare up…..

….Do you have any advice or experience with biologics that are effective for both arthritis and crohn’s?

Barry doesn’t have Rheumatoid Arthritis.

He has been diagnosed with Spondyloarthritis.

Spondyloarthritis (SpA) does not relate to one neat, specific disease entity. Instead, it is a term used to cover a group of rheumatic diseases that are characterised by common clinical features, most frequent of which is inflammatory back pain. Diseases belonging to this SpA group include:

  1. Ankylosing Spondylitis;
  2. Psoriatic Arthritis: usually the patient also has psoriasis, an autoimmune skin condition;
  3. Inflammatory Bowel Disease-related arthritis: associated with Crohn’s disease or Ulcerative Colitis;
  4. Reactive arthritis: when the condition is triggered by an infection, most commonly affecting the genito-urinary or intestinal tract;
  5. Patients who do not quite demonstrate sufficient features to meet the criteria for the above classifications, & are then described as having undifferentiated SpA or peripheral SpA or non-radiographic Axial SpA.

Please note that the above describes quite a varied group and depending on the primary manifestations, these patients when referred on for specialist care, may see a gastroenterologist, a dermatologist, an ophthalmologist or a rheumatologist. Types of initial treatment used will differ, and criteria will differ for consideration of biologic treatment.

I am now going to generalise.

If a patient has SpA, not responding to the standard treatments, and meets criteria for biologic DMARD treatment, the current choice of biologic is simple.

TNF-inhibitor.

In the post on biologic choice for Rheumatoid Arthritis, I mentioned Tocilizumab (an IL-6 inhibitor), Abatacept (inhibits co-stimulation of T-cells) and Rituximab (antibody against CD20, affecting B-cells). None of these are effective in SpA.

TNF-inhibitor medication is the class of biologic DMARD with good clinical trial evidence and approval for use in Ankylosing Spondylitis, in Psoriasis & Psoriatic Arthritis, in Crohn’s Disease & Ulcerative Colitis. The TNF-inhibitor medications help the joint symptoms (both peripheral joint & spine), the skin manifestations, the eye disease, and the bowel symptoms.

And typically, they help the different manifestations in the same patient.

Unfortunately for Barry, this hasn’t yet been the case. My response to Barry’s email was along these lines:

Enbrel is Etanercept (-cept) and it has a slightly different mode of action. Etanercept does not seem useful for inflammatory bowel disease and is also a little less effective with psoriasis.

In general for patients with SpA, I use one of the  -mab group of TNF inhibitors, for example, Infliximab (Remicade) or Adalimumab (Humira).

The -mab group of TNF inhibitors has been shown to be effective in treating inflammatory bowel disease and ankylosing spondylitis so this would seem the best choice for him.

While it’s surprising that Infliximab was never effective for his ankylosing spondylitis, it would still make sense for Barry to swap to a different -mab, and he has, to Certolizumab (Cimzia). Hopefully, this will be the answer.

As always, I welcome your thoughts and any experiences you can share.

BJC Health established the Sydney Spondyloarthritis Centre in 2011. We raise the profile of these diseases, we provide a better pathway to diagnosis, provide education as well as world-class treatment. Most importantly, we care & we want to improve the lives of people suffering from these diseases. Read about it here.

Dr Irwin Lim is a rheumatologist and a director of BJC Health. You should follow him on twitter here.
Arthritis requires an integrated approach. We call this, Connected Care. Contact us.
This blog focuses on arthritis, healthcare in general, and Connected Care. Please subscribe to keep in touch:
 
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The complicated concept of Axial SpA explained

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By Dr Irwin Lim, Rheumatologist

Up to 5% of patients with chronic back pain have an Inflammatory cause for the spinal symptoms rather than or in addition to, mechanical/degenerative reasons.

The prototype cause of inflammatory spinal disease is Ankylosing Spondylitis (for a description of this, follow link).

The problem is that the diagnosis of Ankylosing Spondylitis (AS) depends on seeing damage on Xrays of a particular area of the lower back/buttock region, called the Sacroiliac joints. These changes are called sacroiliitis.

When severe, and typically late in the disease, sacroiliitis is easy to diagnose (animation link).

However, it is true that the Xray diagnosis can be very difficult earlier in the disease.

It’s well understood that it may take years for these changes to be apparent, and therefore, the diagnosis is not made for years. It’s delayed.

To try to address this, the concept of Axial Spondyloarthritis was developed by the Assessment of SpondyloArthritis international Society (ASAS group).

Axial Spondyloarthritis (axial SpA) refers to inflammatory disease in which the  predominant symptom is back pain, and where radiological changes of sacroiliitis may or may not be present.

Now, this relatively new term confuses many, including many rheumatologists who may not be used to it. It’s however a concept that is here to stay. Current medical literature, both textbooks and scientific journals, will refer to this term so I thought it would be good to give you some handle on this.

Within this axial SpA group, you then have 2 subgroups:

  1. Ankylosing Spondylitis (AS) – this is the diagnosis when the Xray changes for sacroiliitis are clearly present
  2. Non-radiographic axial spondyloarthritis – this is the type of axial SpA in which the Xray changes are not present. This term is a mouthful, usually abbreviated to non-radiographic axial SpA or nr-axSpA.

Non-radiographic axial SpA is diagnosed when there is a typical story for inflammatory back pain, with other clinical criteria pointing to it or by typical changes on MRI showing active inflammation of the bone.

So think of the term Axial SpA as an attempt to encompass both patients with late stage disease, Ankylosing Spondylitis, and those with earlier stage disease, non-radiographic axial SpA.

BJC Health established the Sydney Spondyloarthritis Centre in 2011. We raise the profile of these diseases, we provide a better pathway to diagnosis, provide education as well as world-class treatment. Most importantly, we care & we want to improve the lives of people suffering from these diseases. Read about it here.

Dr Irwin Lim is a rheumatologist and a director of BJC Health. You should follow him on twitter here.
Arthritis requires an integrated approach. We call this, Connected Care. Contact us.
This blog focuses on arthritis, healthcare in general, and Connected Care. Please subscribe to keep in touch:
 
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