
Managing ANCA Vasculitis: Guideline ‘Transcends' Specialties
MANCHESTER, England — A soon-to-be-released guidance from the British Society for Rheumatology on the management of antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA)–associated vasculitis (AAV) emphasizes not only the need for more aggressive management but also the importance of cross-specialty services that can be accessed quickly throughout the United Kingdom.
The revised recommendations are timely as they coincide with a National Health Service (NHS) England initiative that is looking at how to improve rheumatology services across the board generally through its Getting It Right First Time initiative. One of the first steps in this initiative for improving AAV services in particular has been to set up a national cohort of patients that can be tracked through the healthcare system to see what improvements are needed in order to optimize overall care and service outcomes.
'The management of vasculitis transcends specialty,' Neil Basu, MBChB, PhD, professor of musculoskeletal medicine and vasculitis at the University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland, said in introducing the updated AAV guidelines, which he was a part of, at the British Society for Rheumatology (BSR) 2025 Annual Meeting. 'I think it's entirely appropriate, and great, that we have a nephrologist leading the way with our BSR guidelines.'
Lorraine Harper, MBChB, PhD
That nephrologist is Lorraine Harper, MBChB, PhD, a consultant and professor at the University of Birmingham, Birmingham, England, and chair of the multidisciplinary team of experts who have been involved in updating the guidance.
Harper noted at the BSR session that it was high time that the recommendations for managing AAV in the United Kingdom were reprised: 'The 2014 guidelines really did significantly impact the way we managed patients with vasculitis, but there's a lot gone on since 2014, and it now doesn't reflect best practice.'
Moreover, the previous guidance did not 'span the age range,' Harper said, a consideration that has now been included in the AAV guidance update, as well as many other BSR clinical guidelines that have been updated recently.
In comments to Medscape Medical News , Chetan Mukhtyar, MD, PhD, a consultant rheumatologist for Norfolk and Norwich University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Norwich, England, who was not involved with creating the guidelines, said 'there are some emerging data that have now demonstrated what we have always known in vasculitis, that it is not something that should be taken lightly; it has significant immediate mortality, and it has long-term implications on resources. We need to get it right, quickly and first time, and the recommendations will help us get there, but the resource implications will need to be recognized by the wider NHS.'
Building on Existing Evidence
Members of the British AAV guideline working group consulted recent recommendations from other organizations, including that from the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) published in 2021, the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology (EULAR) published last year, and the Kidney Disease: Improving Patient Outcomes (KDIGO) organization, also published in 2024.
'Although we used the BSR methodology, we did adapt a little bit, so we didn't do the literature search from 2014; where the area we're looking at was covered by EULAR, we used their literature search. So that we weren't just reinventing the wheel,' Harper said.
To produce the guidance, 30 experts across the five specialties of rheumatology, nephrology, otolaryngology, respiratory medicine, and pediatrics formed five small working groups to look at specific topic areas. These were the treatment of granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA) and microscopic polyangiitis (MPA); the treatment of subglottic stenosis and ear, nose, and throat (ENT) disease associated with GPA; the treatment of eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis (EGPA); service specification; and patient education and support.
Key Update Examples
The revised recommendations, which are expected to be published in early June, include a change to how immunosuppression should be used in the initial treatment of GPA and MPA, with a more aggressive approach than previously.
'Back in 2014, we recommended [intravenous] pulsed cyclophosphamide or rituximab for organ- or life-threatening disease. We've amended that now to suggest that all patients with active ANCA vasculitis should be considered for intravenous pulsed cyclophosphamide or rituximab,' Harper said.
In addition, treatment with rituximab should be preferred for patients with relapsing disease. This aligns with the 2024 EULAR guidance but differs from the 2021 ACR guidance, she said.
The revised British guidance states that methotrexate and mycophenolate mofetil 'may be considered' as alternatives for induction therapy for patients with active disease but without any evidence of life- or organ-threatening disease, but that cyclophosphamide and rituximab are preferred.
'Plasma exchange remains a contentious issue, and should we use it?' Harper asked. In the PEXIVAS trial, there was no difference seen in the combined outcome endpoint of death and end stage kidney disease. However, post hoc data suggest there could be earlier and fuller recovery of renal function with plasma exchange.
Based on available data, the British recommendation 'takes a pragmatic view' to think about using plasma exchange only in adult patients with active GPA or MPA and severe renal involvement if they have a serum creatinine level > 300 mmol/L (3.4 mg/dL).
The use of adjunctive plasma exchange needs to be carefully balanced against the risk for potential adverse events, Harper cautioned. And while its use in pediatrics should be limited to a case-by-case basis, plasma exchange does appear to have beneficial role in managing pulmonary hemorrhage, so long as there is no severe kidney involvement.
Reducing Glucocorticoid Dependency
With avacopan (Tavneos) now available, the recommendations are to use it in active GPA or MPA as a potential glucocorticoid-sparing agent; this could be given with or without a short course of steroids, Harper explained, with tapering taking place over a 4-week period.
For patients with organ- or life-threatening disease, the recommendation is to use oral steroids at a starting dose of 50-75 mg, or 1.0 mg/kg/d; dosing is dependent on weight, Harper said, with the maximum daily recommended dose at 75 mg. Oral prednisolone should be tapered in accordance with the schedule used in the PEXIVAS trial, with the aim to get the dose down to 5 mg prednisolone equivalent per day by 4-5 months.
And if the disease is considered neither organ- nor life-threatening, lower steroid-tapering regimens can be considered, starting at a dose of 0.5 mg/kg/d, and tapering according to the schedule used in the LoVAS clinical trial.
For maintenance therapy, Harper reported that the updated recommendation was to use rituximab in preference to other agents, using a fixed dosing regimen of 500-1000 mg every 4-6 months. Such treatment should be continued for at least 2-4 years. This was 'a big change' from the 2014 guidance, but again follows ACR, EULAR, and KDIGO guidance.
'Limited GPA' a Misnomer
'We want to get away from using the term 'limited,' when it comes to talking about GPA-related ENT disease because it underestimates the disease burden,' Harper said. Instead, 'ENT-localized' or 'sino-nasal GPA' would be preferred.
ENT involvement is where multidisciplinary assessment is particularly vital, Harper said. If there is a plan for reconstructive surgery, the patient needs to be in remission for at least 12 months 'otherwise high failure and complication rates are observed,' she said.
Recommendation Updates for EGPA
The presence of asthma, particularly if it is adult-onset, remains important for making an EGPA diagnosis. Asthma combined with chronic rhinosinusitis with or without nasal polyps, eosinophilia (typically ≥ 1.5 × 109/L), and end-organ involvement would be considered indicative of having EGPA.
Harper acknowledged that because of EGPA's heterogeneous clinical phenotype, a specialized multidisciplinary approach is necessary to exclude other eosinophilic syndromes.
For initial treatment, it is recommended that all patients with active disease are assessed for their suitability for induction treatment with glucocorticoids combined with other immunomodulatory agents. Harper noted that the recommended first-line option is intravenous pulsed cyclophosphamide, but if it is contraindicated or unacceptable to the patient, rituximab would be the next choice.
As for newer treatments, the anti–interleukin-5–directed therapies mepolizumab and benralizumab were recommended for induction and maintenance of remission, but only in people with nonorgan– or nonlife–threatening disease, Harper said. This is because the recommendation is based on the findings of the MIRRA and MANDARA trials, which excluded patients with more serious disease. Thus, the current recommendation is only to use these drugs in the same population of patients as had been studied in the trials, Harper said.
Service Recommendations
One of the unique aspects of the guideline update is its detailing of how vasculitis services in the United Kingdom should ideally be set up, and not just based on expert opinion.
Rosemary J. Hollick
This is the first time that specific, patient-led service recommendations have been included in BSR guidelines, or indeed any vasculitis guidelines, said Rosemary J. Hollick, MBChB, PhD, a senior clinical lecturer and rheumatologist at the University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, Scotland, and the clinical lead for the Scottish Systemic Vasculitis Managed Clinical Network.
The recommendations are based on findings from the Versus Arthritis–funded Vasculitis Outcomes In relation to Care Experience Study (VOICES), which looked at the key components of the best possible service and linked them to patient outcomes.
Prompt Specialist Review
A key recommendation is that people with newly suspected AAV should have a specialist vasculitis review within 7 days. This is backed up by data from VOICES, which showed prompt review to be associated with a 30% reduction in serious infections, a 22% drop in emergency hospital admissions, and a 41% reduction in deaths, Hollick noted.
'Vasculitis has been long overlooked,' Basu told Medscape Medical News in an interview. 'I think we finally have some excellent tools to improve outcomes dramatically, but the challenge is accessing these tools.'
It is important for clinicians, particularly if they are not specialists, to be able to get the support they need to diagnose patients 'really promptly,' Basu added.
Thus, the other key service recommendation in the guideline focuses on how to give that support to clinicians, such as in caring for patients in dedicated, 'cohorted' vasculitis clinics that include nurse-led components of care and regular specialist multidisciplinary team meetings. Data from the VOICES study have suggested that both nurse-led and cohorted clinics result in significant reductions in both serious infections (35% and 25%, respectively) and emergency hospital admissions (25% and 19%, respectively).
A further recommendation is that people with AAV should feel empowered in shared decision-making and collaborate with their healthcare team to make joint decisions about their care. There are many tools already out there to help explain what shared decision-making should look like to patients, Hollick said.
VOICES was funded by Versus Arthritis . Basu and Harper reported no relevant financial relationships. Hollick had received funding unrelated to her presentation from CSL Vifor. Mukhtyar was not involved in the guideline development.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Medscape
6 hours ago
- Medscape
5 Things You Need to Know When Treating Gout
Welcome to Rheum With a Viewpoint . My name is Dr Arinola Dada, and I've been practicing rheumatology for 20 years. Let's talk about five things you need to know when you're treating patients with gout. 1. Your patients have been taking anti-inflammatory medications when you were not looking. It's possible that your patients may have some kidney damage, so when they call you on Saturday night to report an acute attack of gout and your first instinct is to order indomethacin, take a pause and consider trying something else. My go-to medication is prednisone. 2. How much prednisone should you give your patient? The secret in the world of rheumatology is to go slow. You can start with 40 mg/d of prednisone for 4 days, then taper down to 30 mg/d for 4 days, then 20 mg/d for 4 days, and continue to reduce in that fashion. That secret sauce is going to help you treat your patient's acute gout. 3. When should you start allopurinol? You should not start allopurinol during an acute attack. Remember, allopurinol does not treat acute attacks. Allopurinol is there to help lower uric acid levels in the blood. It's useful for prevention and management, but you want to start allopurinol after an acute attack of gout has settled. If the patient is already on allopurinol, they can continue taking their medication without adjusting the dose. Simply treat the acute attack. 4. Women tend to get tophi in their fingers. You may want to look closely if you have a female patient with suspected gout. Patients report that this acute pain feels like somebody smashed their finger with a hammer. That kind of complaint would give you insight that your female patient may actually be experiencing gout in her DIP joints or inside her Heberden nodes. 5. Remember that when patients have tophi, they may not be able to feel it. Talk to your local radiologist to see if you can order a dual-energy CT (DECT) scan. It really helps differentiate between gout and pseudogout.


Scientific American
15 hours ago
- Scientific American
Engineered Viruses Make Neurons Glow and Treat Brain Disease
The brain is like an ecosystem—thousands of different types of cells connect to form one big, interdependent web. And just as biologists document species of plants and animals, neuroscientists have spent decades identifying different 'species' of neurons and other brain cells that support them. They've found more than 3,000 cell types spread throughout the brain, including chandelier neurons surrounded by branching arms, pyramidal neurons with far-reaching nerve fibers and star-shaped astrocytes that help neurons form new connections with one another. This newfound diversity is not only a beautiful picture for neuroscientists—it's also key to understanding how the brain works and what goes wrong in certain brain diseases. From Parkinson's disease to schizophrenia, many brain disorders stem from specific types of brain cells. 'As long as I've been doing neuroscience, it's been a goal of researchers to have brain-cell-type-targeting tools,' says Jonathan Ting of the Allen Institute, a nonprofit research center in Seattle. Now they have them in spades. In a fleet of eight studies funded by the National Institutes of Health and published last week, scientists from 29 research institutions found and tested more than 1,000 new ways to home in on specific cell types, no matter where they are in the brain. On supporting science journalism If you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today. The technique behind these tools uses non-disease-causing viruses (called adeno-associated viruses, or AAVs) to deliver genes directly to specific neurons. This can make the cells do almost anything. Scientists can turn them off, activate them, 'light them up like a Christmas tree' with glowing proteins or deliver gene therapies right to them, says Ting, senior author of one of the new studies. The researchers have tested the technique only in nonhuman animals, but the bulk of the tools work across mammal species and would likely work in humans, too. Similar, less-targeted AAV gene therapies are already approved for treating spinal muscular atrophy and are being tested in clinical trials for Huntington's disease. 'There are a lot of good examples' of how AAVs are being used to treat brain disease, says Nikolaus McFarland, a neurologist at the University of Florida, who treats neurodegenerative diseases such as Parkinson's and Huntington's. 'It's really exciting stuff.' Viral Shuttles Every type of brain cell is like a unique creature. Scientists have categorized the cells based on their shape, location and electrical properties—and, more generally, based on the genes they express most out of an organism's full library of DNA. By expressing certain genes, these cells carry out specific actions, such as building specialized proteins. If researchers can identify a unique snippet of genetic code that is activated just in those cells, they can use that snippet to target them. Next, they attach this genetic snippet, called an enhancer, to an AAV that has been gutted of its viral DNA. They can fill the viral husk with specific genes to deliver to those cells. The now-filled husks enter the bloodstream like a fleet of delivery shuttles, bypassing the blood-brain barrier, but are only able to activate their genetic cargo in cells with the enhancer. In the new studies, researchers focused on cell types in three parts of the brain: the outer layer of brain tissue called the cortex that plays a role in higher-level thinking, the striatum, which is part of the basal ganglia (a stretch of deep brain tissue) that is impacted in Huntington's and Parkinson's disease, and the spinal cord, whose motor neurons are destroyed in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The consortium of 247 scientists was funded by the NIH's Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies (BRAIN) Initiative as a part of a larger research project called the Armamentarium for Precision Brain Cell Access. The scientists found and tested more than 1,000 enhancer AAVs, now freely available to researchers, that target specific cell types in those key brain regions. Tweaking the Brain Previously, these enhancer AAVs had been developed in a slow trickle by different labs, but 'now we have thousands of tools' to tweak specific cell types, says Bosiljka Tasic, director of molecular genetics at the Allen Institute and senior author of one of the new studies. Researchers can load these AAV shuttles with all sorts of different genes to answer different questions. In some cases, even just seeing the neurons in action is cause for celebration: 'Some of them are very rare cells that you wouldn't find randomly by poking around in brain tissue,' Ting says. To observe them, researchers can introduce a gene that makes a glowing protein that lights up elusive neurons from the inside to reveal their structure and how they connect with other brain cells. Researchers can also control how certain brain cells fire and turn their activity up or down to see how the change impacts an animal's behavior. To do this, researchers insert a gene into the target cells that creates a light-sensitive protein called an opsin; then they can shine specific wavelengths of light on the brain to make those cells fire on command. Ting's team used this technique, called optogenetics, to stimulate certain cells in the striatum of mice. When the researchers stimulated those cells on just one side of the brain, the mice began moving more on one side of their body than the other, causing them to go in circles. These interventions are reversible and repeatable. 'That's the part that's really satisfying for neuroscientists,' Ting says. 'You can turn them off, turn them back on and then see how that affects the brain circuit.' It's ' so much better and also so much more informative' than destroying whole parts of a mouse brain to see what happens, as is the case with much neuroscience research from the past century, Tasic says. 'That brain region may have a hundred different cell types,' so being able to activate and inactivate them more precisely will reveal more information about how these circuits work, she says. New Treatments So far, the new enhancer AAVs have been tested in mice, rats and macaques. 'We keep trying more and more species,' Ting says. 'We haven't even figured out what's the limit.' And that brings us to humans. 'That's really the answer to the question 'Why do we care?'' he says. 'We have built strong evidence that some of these tools—maybe not all of them, but many of them—may work across species into humans and could represent the start of a new therapeutic vector development that could be used to more finely treat debilitating brain disorders.' For these treatments, enhancer AAVs could deliver gene therapy right to the brain cells that need it. The best candidates for this technique are neurodegenerative diseases, such as ALS, Parkinson's disease and Huntington's disease. Researchers are currently working on AAV gene therapies for these conditions and others that target whole regions of the brain rather than specific types of brain cells. Trials of these therapies indicate that they are largely safe. 'We now have lots of good examples of AAV being used,' McFarland says. 'We have [a] good safety record for that.' 'There's a lot that we still don't understand about neurodegenerative diseases,' he adds, and these little viral shuttles will allow scientists to make those discoveries that enable new treatments. While each of these brain disorders is unique, cracking one of them might help scientists crack the others, too, McFarland says: 'I wholeheartedly believe that.'
Yahoo
15 hours ago
- Yahoo
Tuchel wants England to feel the heat before World Cup boot camp in Miami
Thomas Tuchel is planning a warm-weather training break for his England squad next March followed by a pre-World Cup boot camp in Miami in June because of concerns about the impact of high temperatures on the players during the tournament in the US. The England head coach has altered the Football Association's usual travel itinerary this week by taking his squad to Barcelona for a six-day training camp to work them hard in the heat before the World Cup qualifier against Andorra on Saturday. Similar trips are on the agenda for next year. Advertisement Related: Tuchel tells Alexander-Arnold to take England defensive role 'very seriously' Tuchel is working with the FA's medical and sports science departments on strategies to mitigate the effects of high temperatures and he is also keen to give the players as much exposure to extreme conditions as possible. The German intends to pay particular attention to the physical condition of the players when attending games at the Club World Cup this month, while the FA will also send operational staff to the tournament in the US to scout for World Cup training bases and hotels. Tuchel is understood to have expressed a preference for a pre-World Cup training camp in Miami in 12 months' time before England move to their tournament base. The location of the base will depend on the December draw. A long-haul trip for warm-weather training during the March international break may be unpopular with club managers concerned about potential burnout before the Premier League and Champions League run-in, but that will not concern Tuchel. Advertisement After his first game in charge against Albania in March, Tuchel warned top-flight managers that he intended to pick his strongest side whenever possible. The 51-year-old also questioned Mikel Arteta's decision to select Declan Rice for the second leg of Arsenal's Champions League last-16 tie against PSV Eindhoven the previous week, given they had won the first leg 7-1. Tuchel will have the freedom to take his side away next season if England win their World Cup qualifying group to avoid the playoffs. The FA would normally stage two lucrative matches at Wembley before a summer tournament but will support Tuchel' s plans to go away if he concludes it is the best preparation for the World Cup. While the destination has yet to be decided the Middle East is a possibility given the world-class training facilities on offer in hot conditions and the smaller time difference compared with travelling to the US. FA sources said the final decision would be made at the end of England's qualifying campaign.