Conference Coverage

Experts review the year in rheumatology ... and what lies ahead


 

EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM RWCS 2018

The opioid crisis: What’s the most important recent event in rheumatology?

“That’s easy: The biggest thing in all of medicine is the opioid crisis. Whether you recognize it or not, it’s gigantic. It’s $500 billion of the U.S. economy, every year. Forty percent of rheumatoid arthritis patients and 30% with ankylosing spondylitis are on opioids, and what goes along with that is a lot of ugly stuff,” said John J. Cush, MD, professor of medicine and rheumatology at Baylor University in Dallas.

Dr. John J. Cush Bruce Jancin/Frontline Medical News

Dr. John J. Cush

“We’re all worried because our patients do need pain management, and if someone has a significant pain problem, they’re now a pariah. No one wants to take care of you, no one will treat you. We do not in my clinic prescribe opioids anymore. We’ll prescribe tramadol and occasionally Tylenol No. 3, but that’s it. Pain doctors want nothing to do with these patients, primary care doesn’t want them. It’s a gigantic public health problem,” he continued.

Moreover, the FDA is now so leery of opioids that the agency has set the bar unrealistically high for approval of newer agents offering reduced abuse potential.

“I’ve been involved with or watched at least six FDA advisory panels looking at new, lower abuse-potential opioids in the last couple years. Only one agent got through,” according to Dr. Cush.

Dr. Troum commented, “I really think this whole opioid epidemic started with the campaign to make pain the fifth vital sign back in the 1990s. Some of the pharmaceutical companies took that concept and really ran with it.”

Rapamycin for inclusion body myositis: Dr. Kavanaugh’s pick for study of the year was what he described as “a brilliant presentation” of a French multicenter, placebo-controlled clinical trial of rapamycin for patients with inclusion body myositis at the 2017 ACR annual meeting.

“The French group considers IBM [inclusion body myositis] to be essentially Alzheimer’s disease of the muscle, marked by amyloid deposition. They chose to study rapamycin, which not only has immunosuppressive properties because it binds to mTOR [the mammalian target of rapamycin], but it also has the ability to inhibit amyloid protein deposition,” he explained.

The investigators reported improved 6-minute-walk distance and pulmonary function in the rapamycin group, whereas placebo-treated controls rapidly deteriorated.

“This is an approved drug for other indications, and we scratch our heads with IBM. It’s super nice to have something like that,” Dr. Kavanaugh observed.

A look at what’s in store

More tele-rheumatology: “I think the biggest thing is going to be more tele-rheumatology, more tele-ultrasound. Kaiser Permanente said 49% of their visits last year were virtual visits; that number is just going to grow,” predicted Dr. Wells.

Especially in medically underserved areas of the country, including large rural expanses, demand for remote tele-rheumatologic consults with high-quality imaging is going to increase, he added.

Here come cannabinoids for pain control: Dr. Troum predicted that in the depths of the national opioid epidemic, in a climate that discourages legitimate prescribing of traditional pain medications, rheumatologists can anticipate growing patient demand for cannabidiol and other cannabinoids for pain relief.

“I have patients coming in their 60s, 70s, and 80s – these are not young people – who are whispering to me, ‘Can I use this for my chronic pain?’ I think there’s going to be a big push for ways other than opioids to treat our patients’ pain,” according to Dr. Troum.

Tipping point nears for JAK inhibitors: In 2018, it will become clear just how seriously the Food and Drug Administration views the signal of possible increased venous thromboembolic risk associated with the oral JAK inhibitors for rheumatoid arthritis. The agency is expected to rule on Eli Lilly and Incyte’s resubmitted application for marketing approval for the JAK inhibitor baricitinib, which was tripped up earlier based in part upon VTE concerns.

“I think the big story in 2018 will be how the JAK story shakes out – whether this VTE thing has legs,” Dr. Ruderman predicted. “A sea change could be coming in our field, and it’s not coming next year or the year after, but 10 years from now: Are we going to move past the era of methotrexate and use generic small molecules instead? We’re going to find out within the next year whether that’s going to happen.”

Phase 3 results coming on tocilizumab for systemic sclerosis: “I think we’re going to see some really exciting systemic sclerosis data coming out this year,” Dr. Stevens said. Based upon the positive phase 2 results presented for tocilizumab (Actemra) last year, she’s optimistic that the ongoing phase 3 randomized trial will demonstrate a significant advantage over placebo in lung function. Also, ongoing separate clinical trials are evaluating an antifibrotic drug and rapamycin for systemic sclerosis.

Dr. Bergman, too, has high hopes for these studies: “I think we may finally be getting to a place where we can see effective drugs in systemic sclerosis.”


Amazon, Berkshire Hathaway, and JPMorgan Chase form a nonprofit to improve employee health care: In a recent press conference, the three CEOs weren’t specific about their plans, but Dr. Martin predicted the companies are likely to self-insure, bypassing Cigna and the other major health insurance companies and then contracting with physicians. He forecast that “probably within the next 5 years, what they do is going to affect everybody in this room.”

Rheumatologists will need to master a new mindset: Many rheumatologists have gotten comfortable with an all-tumor necrosis factor inhibitor treatment menu for their patients with moderate or severe rheumatoid arthritis. That’s got to change, according to Dr. Cush.

“We now have two IL-6 inhibitors, two IL-17 inhibitors, and we’ll soon have two JAK inhibitors. That’s going to be a direct threat to the not right- or left-brain, but the TNF-brain rheumatologist who now writes prescriptions for three TNF inhibitors in a row before questioning the efficacy. The idea is you will now be using drugs with other mechanisms of action first-line, or at the very least, second-line, and that’s going to be a paradigm shift for a lot of people,” he explained.

None of the speakers reported having financial conflicts regarding their comments.

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