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June 28, 2021
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EULAR releases first evidence-based recommendations for intra-articular therapies

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In an effort to “improve uniformity” and reduce the “wide variation” in intra-articular therapy use, EULAR recently published 11 new recommendations to guide clinicians in employing these therapies for patients with peripheral arthropathies.

According to the group, these recommendations – published in the Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases – are the first ever evidence- and expert opinion-based recommendations on the use of intra-articular therapies.

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Intra-articular therapy is not a contraindication in patients with clotting or bleeding disorders, or those taking antithrombotic medications, unless bleeding risk is high, according to newly released EULAR recommendations. Source: Adobe Stock

“There is a wide variation in the way [intra-articular therapies (IAT)] are used and delivered in patients with arthropathies,” Jacqueline Uson, MD, PhD, of the Rheumatology Hospital Universitario Móstoles, Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, in Madrid, and colleagues wrote. “Health professionals may have different views and habits depending on training and access to IATs, and individual patients also have their own needs and preferences. To the best of our knowledge, no international and multidisciplinary effort has been made to develop evidence-based recommendations when performing IAT.”

To establish recommendations based on evidence for the use of intra-articular therapies in adults with peripheral arthropathies, EULAR convened a multidisciplinary international task force that included 12 clinical experts, one rheumatology nurse and one patient representative. The clinical experts included a rheumatologist, an orthopedic surgeon, a nuclear medicine specialist and a radiologist. The task force developed objectives and the scope of their project, and performed a systemic literature review. Meanwhile, two surveys were used to assess the opinions of health care providers and patients throughout Europe.

A total of 200 participants across Europe responded to the 44-item patient survey, while 186 health care providers from 26 countries answered their survey, which featured 160 questions. The results of the literature reviewed were used to address 32 questions established by the task force. Members then discussed the evidence and survey results in a face-to-face meeting, drafting and later approving their recommendations through an anonymous three-round Delphi process.

According to the task force, the results of the patient survey suggest that the use of intra-articular therapies could be improved through, for example, greater access, better shared decision making, and more attention paid to reducing pain during the procedure. Ultimately, members of the task force approved five overarching principles and 11 recommendations, addressing issues related to patient information, procedure and setting, as well as accuracy, routine and special aseptic care, safety issues in special populations, the efficacy and safety of repeated joint injections, use of local anesthetics and aftercare.

The recommendations include:

  • Patients must be fully informed of all aspects of the procedure, including about the drug and its potential benefits and risks;
  • The best setting for the procedure should feature a “professional, clean, quiet, private, well-lighted” setting, with space where the patient can easily lie flat, equipment for aseptic and resuscitation measures, and aid from another health provider;
  • Imaging guidance, such as ultrasound, if available, may be used to improve accuracy;
  • For those who are pregnant, providers should consider whether the drug is safe for both the patient and the baby;
  • Providers should always perform aseptic techniques when administering intra-articular therapies;
  • Providers should offer patients anesthetics, alongside explanations of their potential risks and benefits;
  • Patients with diabetes, and especially those with minimal disease control, should receive information about the risk for transient increased glycaemia following intra-articular glucocorticoids, as well as the need to monitor glucose levels, particularly from days 1 to 3;
  • Intra-articular therapy is not a contraindication for people with clotting or bleeding disorders, or in those receiving antithrombotic medications, unless bleeding risk is high;
  • The procedure may be administered at least 3 months prior to joint replacement, as well as after joint replacement following a consultation with the surgical team;
  • Shared decision-making to reinject a joint should include considerations of the benefits seen from prior injections and individual factors, such as other treatment options and comorbidities; and
  • Although immobilization is discouraged, providers should avoid the overuse of injected joints for 24 hours following the procedure.

“Despite IAT being an important procedure and widely used for more than 70 years, many aspects of IAT still need to be assessed to increase our quality of care,” Uson and colleagues wrote. “These may include safe and cost-effective settings and procedures; whether ultrasound diagnosis and guidance improve outcome; better RCTs, and perhaps a real-life registry of IATs, like the arthroplasty registers.”

The authors additionally included a “disclaimer” that the recommendations were drafted prior to the COVID-19 pandemic outbreak, and as such do not include specific safety measures to prevent SARS-CoV-2 viral infection, nor any measures to be used when having to deliver intra-articular therapy to patients with COVID-19.

“Health professionals and patients should follow local country regulations and recommendations relating to this matter,” they added. “We expect these first recommendations to be included in different educational programs, used by patient associations and put into practice via scientific societies to help improve uniformity and quality of care when performing IAT in peripheral adult joints.”