Hydroxychloroquine - Risks and Benefits in Lupus
Benefits:
↓ Disease activity, ↓ Flare, ↓ Damage, ↓ Corticosteroid dose, ↓ Mortality, ↓ Thrombosis, ↓ Severe infection, ↓ Hyperlipidemia, ↓ SSA-associated fetal block, ↓ Cardiovascular risk, ↓ Polyautoimmunity 
Risks:
 - Retinopathy: 2-3% of patients, usually after 5-20 years [monitoring needed)
 - Digestive intolerance nausea, diarrhea, bloating [common]
 - Prolonged QTc (association not recommended with other medications leading to prolonged QT) [very rare if no interaction]
 - Cardiomyopathy [very rare with ~100 cases reported and usually after many years, usually severe]: conduction abnormalities and/or cardiac insufficiency
 - Cuteanous: acute generalized exanthematous pustulosis (AGEP) [rare but usually severe], pruritis and aquagenic urticaria [quite common], hyperpigmentation [usually after years]
 - Hematological: cytopenia, agranulocytosis [rare, should be known by doctors]
 - Neuro-muscular: vacuolar myopathy [rare to very rare: due to muscular accumulation], extrapyramidal manifestations [exceptionall
 - Hypoglycaemia [very uncommon but should be known by physicians]
 - Worsening of other diseases: myasthenia gravis [use with caution] and G6PD deficiency [(limited) risk of hemolysis], psoriasis [can worsen], porphyria [can flare]
 - Dose adaptation needed in case of renal or hepatic insufficiency
 - Tinnitus & eye accommodation problems (check cinchonism)

Dr. Laurent ARNAUD @Lupusreference

#Hydroxychloroquine #hcq #Risks #Benefits #Lupus #pharmacology #adverseeffects #sideeffects #rheumatology
Dr. Gerald Diaz @GeraldMD · 4 years ago
Board Certified Internal Medicine Hospitalist, GrepMed Editor in Chief 🇵🇭 🇺🇸 - Sign up for an account to like, bookmark and upload images to contribute to our community platform. Follow us on IG: https://www.instagram.com/grepmed/ | Twitter: https://twitter.com/grepmeded/
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