GCA prednisone vs. actemra infusion therapy
I am thinking of trying Actemra. Please let me know you thoughts if you are on Actemra. I am on 25 mg of prednisone and am tired of the side effects. thank you
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Hi @dadcue, I also find your posts very helpful and was hoping you could share more about Actemra Injections vs Infusion. I have had significant pain with tapering—even with very small doses (.5 mg) and have not been able to get below 15 mg of Prednisone in my 2.5 years with PMR. My pain becomes unbearable (7 to 8 level) in hips, shoulders and low back. I currently use a rollator to get around and have actively seen an Orthopedist, Rheumatologist and PT. I am scheduled for my 4th Actemra infusion on Monday but to date, I have not seen any major improvement. I do believe that my shoulder pain may have slightly improved but the hip and back pain have not diminished at all. I noted that you switched from infusion to injections and then back to infusions when you were well controlled. Do you think that the injection was more effective for reducing pain? Thanks for any insight you can provide. Blessings! ❤️
Uveitis, you have dealt with a lot. I read up on it when I was having subconjunctival hemorrages continuously for 6 months. I was on 35 mg of prednisone when it started, and Actemra. It stopped suddenly after I had decreased prednisone to maybe 10, and hasn’t returned. No explanation ever found.
To answer your question, The relapse I had was GCA, scalp tenderness and temporal pain. No PMR symptoms that I recall.
This subject is very complicated. I don't know all that much other than what my rheumatologist tells me. It boils down to the following:
"Unlike intravenous dosing, the tocilizumab subcutaneous dosing regimens use a fixed dose (162 mg) over a wide range of body weights."
Good luck with understanding the link that this quote is taken from.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5363244/
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I can share with you my personal experience with taking Actemra. I had an extremely good response to Actemra with very miniml side effects. My rheumatologist is amazed with how well Actemra is working for me. Since it is working so well for me, my rheumatologist seems reluctant to discontinue Actemra.
During the course of my almost 6 years of taking Actemra the route of administration, frequency of injections, dose of my infusions and frequency of my infusions have all been tweaked. During Covid, Actemra had to be stopped when Actemra was unavailable. I didn't do well when Actemra was stopped. Unlike Prednisone, Actemra can be easily discontinued if necessary. Actemra is like any other medication and it needs to be adjusted based on a person's individual response.
My first experience with Actemra was doing injections every 2 weeks. My rheumatologist wasn't sure what would happen. The reason I was given for starting with injections every 2 weeks was to "play it safe!"
Much of what is known about Actemra is from the research that was done for people with RA. For PMR/GCA what has been learned is mostly based on "good results" from the GIACTA study and not much else.
https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1613849
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When I started with the Actemra injections every two weeks I had to commit to giving Actemra a chance to work. Actemra didn't work immediately and I didn't notice any significant changes at first. I wasn't that sure Actemra was working until I started tapering my Prednisone dose by 1 mg per week. I only tapered my Prednisone dose that quickly "in order to get the inevitable flare over with."
When the flare didn't happen, I decided to tell my rheumatologist that I was down to 3 mg of Prednisone and I wasn't sure what to do next. At least I realized that I was in uncharted territory. My rheumatologist wasn't sure what I should do either until I reminded him that an endocrinologist said I should come back to see her if I ever got down to 3 mg of Prednisone.
My rheumatologist thought it was prudent to check my cortisol level before referring me back to the endocrinologist. When my cortisol level was low, my rheumatologist told me to stop tapering. He told me to stay on 3 mg until I could be evaluated by the endocrinologist.
Thanks so much for sharing your experience and for providing the links. I am not familiar with the study and found the outcome very encouraging. I look forward to a complete review. Knowing that you did not have “immediate” success is also helpful. I think I was worried that it just wasn’t working but it might just be time to tweak this a bit.
I have found this group to be incredibly beneficial when we share a little bit of our personal experience. When you got better, you could have chosen to go back to your regular life but thanks for sticking around to offer up some experience when you have it. Wisdom during the journey is all any of us can hope for. Biggest Blessings! ❤️
Uveitis was just the start of things to come when I was 32 years old. I was diagnosed with reactive arthritis after an enteric infection. I was HLA-B27+ so that is blamed for multiple autoimmune conditions.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK551523/
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If reactive arthritis and uveitis wasn't enough, systemic inflammation exposed other medical problems not the least of which was trigeminal neuralgia (TN). Apparently TN can be confused with GCA. Good thing I was too young for PMR/GCA because the symptoms of everything combined could easily be misdiagnosed as PMR/GCA.
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/trigeminal-neuralgia/symptoms-causes/syc-20353344
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PMR was a late addition to everything else. My rheumatologist always asks me if I have any symptoms of GCA. I know the difference so I deny GCA symptoms. My ophthalmologist who has treated more than 30 flares of uveitis says he doesn't see any evidence of GCA so that's reassuring.
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I might have large vessel vasculitis because my aorta doesn't look so good whenever a MRI of my spine is done. I don't have the diagnosis of GCA. However, when Actemra was started, I read the recommendation from the panel of doctors that authorized Actemra for me. The recommendation was to treat me with Actemra "AS IF" I had GCA.
"When you got better, you could have chosen to go back to your regular life but thanks for sticking around to offer up some experience when you have it."
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I don't think going back to my regular life is possible at this stage. That would predate all the autoimmune problems that started when I was 32 years old and it has been a very long journey. I have learned a few things along the way but I don't ever claim to have an entitlement to know everything. I'm still in the process of learning and that will never stop.
I have learned from my own experience but that doesn't mean I can't learn something from the experience that someone else has. I guess that was what I liked the most about nursing. I could learn from the experience of patients without ever having the same experience!
Thanks for sharing. So much to consider as we walk this path. How much is PMR and how much is just getting older and wearing out. Willing to share your age?
I turned 70 a few months ago. I'm amazed that I made this long. At 50, I was saying 10 more years if I was lucky ... except I didn't want to live past 60.