Takayasu Arteritis (TAK) is a large-vessel vasculitis that preferentially involves the aorta and its primary branches. Cardiac involvement is frequent in TAK and is a major determinant of the patient's outcome. Glucocorticoids (GC) are the mainstay of therapy for TAK, with high doses of GC effective to induce remission. However, relapses are common and lead to repeated and prolonged GC treatments with high risk of related adverse events. Potential GC toxicity is a major concern, especially because patients with TAK are young and need to be treated for several years, often for the whole life. Conventional immunosuppressive drugs are used in patients with severe manifestations but present some limitations. New therapeutic approaches are needed for patients with refractory disease or contraindications to conventional therapies. Fortunately, major progress has been made in understanding TAK pathogenesis, leading to the development of targeted biotherapies. In particular, IL-6 and TNF-α pathways seems to be the most promising therapeutic targets, with emerging data on Tocilizumab and TNF inhibitors. On the other hand, new insights on JAK-Inhibitors, Rituximab, Ustekinumab and Abatacept have been explored in recent studies. This review summarizes the emerging therapies used in TAK, focusing on the most recent studies on biologics and analyzing their efficacy and safety.
Eosinophilic Granulomatosis with Polyangiitis (EGPA) is a rare autoimmune disease characterized by medium and small vessels inflammation. Cardiac vasculitic involvement is one of the most severe manifestations with a significant impact on patients' long-term prognosis: anyway, a specific therapeutic approach for heart involvement in EGPA has not been explored yet. Current regimen consists of a long-term therapy with high dose of glucocorticoids, causing the well-known related-adverse events; immunosuppressive drugs are used in patients with severe manifestations, with some limitations. New therapeutic approaches are needed for patients with refractory disease or contraindications to conventional therapies. The quest for the ideal therapy is going toward a more and more personalized approach: on the one hand, efforts are made to use already existing therapies in the most appropriate way; on the other hand, new insights into EGPA pathogenesis allow the discovery of new targets, as demonstrated by mepolizumab and rituximab, targeting eosinophils, and B-cell compartments. This review summarizes the emerging therapies used in EGPA, focusing on the most recent studies on biologics and analyzing their efficacy and safety.
The term “thin basement membrane” (TBM) refers to a glomerular disorder characterized by diffuse uniform thinning of the glomerular basement membrane (GBM) on electron microscopy. Patients with TBM usually show an isolated hematuria with excellent renal prognosis. However, some patients can develop proteinuria and progressive kidney dysfunction in the long term. Most patients with TBM are heterozygous for pathogenic variants in genes encoding for both the α3 and α4 chains of collagen IV, a major constituent of GBM. Such variants are responsible for a wide range of clinical and histological phenotypes. The differential diagnosis between TBM and autosomal-dominant Alport syndrome and IgA nephritis (IGAN) may be difficult in some cases. Patients who progress to chronic kidney disease may show clinicopathologic features similar to those of primary focal and segmental glomerular sclerosis (FSGS). Without a shared classification of these patients, the risk of misdiagnosis and/or underestimation of the risk of progressive kidney disease is real. New efforts are needed to understand the determinants of renal prognosis and recognize the early signs of renal deterioration, allowing a custom-made diagnosis and therapeutic approach. For this purpose, a practical and simple clinical approach is supplied.
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