Conference Coverage

Lower hydroxychloroquine dose for lupus tied to hospitalizations for flares


 

AT ACR 2022

“I don’t think this question is settled,” he told this news organization. “The 5 mg/kg dose recommendation was based on terms of safety but not of effectiveness. We don’t know what the effective dose of HCQ is, and this study shows that low dose is less effective.”

He agreed there needs to be a risk/benefit balance, but noted, “HCQ retinopathy is very rare and we have great tools to screen for it.”

Study limitations include incomplete information on whether patients adhered to treatment plans and reasons for using lower-dose HCQ.

The study authors and Dr. Duarte Garcia report no relevant financial relationships.

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

Pages

Recommended Reading

Cell-killing cancer therapy treats lupus successfully
MDedge Internal Medicine
Hormones’ impact described in transgender rheumatology patients
MDedge Internal Medicine
Breakthrough COVID studies lend support to use of new boosters in immunosuppressed patients
MDedge Internal Medicine
Evusheld PrEP may protect immunocompromised patients from severe COVID-19
MDedge Internal Medicine
IVIG proves effective for dermatomyositis in phase 3 trial
MDedge Internal Medicine
Metabolites may distinguish severe subtypes of PAH
MDedge Internal Medicine
First recommendations for cancer screening in myositis issued
MDedge Internal Medicine
Clinical signs differ between children and adults with vasculitis
MDedge Internal Medicine
Rituximab ‘a reasonable alternative to cyclophosphamide’ to improve ILD-CTD
MDedge Internal Medicine
Remibrutinib safe for Sjögren’s in phase 2
MDedge Internal Medicine