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INTRODUCTION
Methotrexate is a Antimetabolite agent
with
antiinflammatory properties and possibly
immunosuppressive effect.
In 1971 US FDA approve methotrexate
for use in Psoriasis & for Rheumatoid arthritis
in 1980.


STRUCTURE:



Methotrexate (4-amino-N methyl pteroylglutamic
acid)is a potant competitive antagonist
(inhibitor)of enzyme dihydrofolate
reductase(DHFR).
It is structurally similar to folic acid ,

the natural substrate for this enzyme .


Mtx. Differing from folic acid in only two areas:-
monoheptaglutamate

Pteroyl
OH
N H

NH2
(Amino
group)

FOLIC ACID

CH3
(Methyl group)

METHOTREXATE






Methotrexate can be administrated
orally ; intravenously , intramuscularly, or
subcutaneously.It is rapidly absorbed through
the G.I.T tract, although peak level occur
more slowly (1 hr after ingestion)through this
route than other two routes.
The drug is well distributed throughout the
body except in the brain, penetrating the
blood brain barrier poorly (used intrathecal in
some chemotherapy regimens).
Once absorbed , the level of Mtx. in plasma
has triphasic reduction (distribution , renal
excretion , termination)
(A) DNA Synthesis Effects:

Inhibits DNA synthesis by competitively
and irreversibly inhibiting enzyme,
dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) which
converts dihydrofolate to tetrahydrofolate
essential for DNA synthesis.
(B) Anti-inflamatory Effects:

Methotrexate increases local
concentration
of adenosine, antiinflammatory mediator,by
blocking AICART enzyme . It decreases the
concentration of S-adenyl methionine (SAM,
proinflammatory mediator) by blocking
methionine synthetase.
T-Cell Effects

(C)
Indication :FDA-approved indication


•



Psoriasis including non- responsive or
disabling plaque psoriasis of more than
20% BSA,
psoriatic arthritis,
pustular psoriasis,
psoriatic erythroderma.
Sezary syndrome.
Off-lable use : Reiter's

disease (For cutaneous and
rheumatologic manifestations).

 Dermatomyositis

(useful predominantly for
muscle involvement).

 Sarcoidosis
 Mycoses

stage).

(with systemic involvement)

fungoides (Patch and plaque

 Pemphigus

vulgaris.




Pityriasis rubra pilaris (higher or double
doses as compared to psoriasis).
Crusted scabies.
Vasculitis (as a steroid sparing agent)

Dermatitis
 Atopic dermatitis



Other dermatosis
Sarcoidosis, keloides, lymphomatoid
papulosis, keratoacanthomas,
cutaneous crohn’s d’s.
Contraindication:Absolute C/I :

Pregnancy



Lactation
Relative C/I: Unreliable

patient – including excessive
alcohol intake.
 Decrease renal function test(dose must
be reduced).
 Diabetes mellitus or obesity.
 Severe hematologic abnormalities.
 Man or woman contemplating
conceptions(3 months off drug for man &
off one ovulation cycle for woman)
 Immunodeficiency syndrome
Doses and preparations :

7.5-15 mg/ week (rarly exceeds 30
mg)



ORAL- Neotrexate, Mexate 2.5 mg
tablet.



INJECTABLE- ( I.M, I.V, S.C ) Imutrex
15
mg/ ml (2 ml
injection) .
Adverse Effects:-



Systemic adverse effects :Mucositis, nausea, vomiting, abdominal
pain, hepatotoxicity, pancytopenia,
nephrotoxicity (with high doses), stress
fractures.
Cutaneous adverse effects:Aphthous stomatitis , alopecia,
hyperpigmentation, toxic epidermal
necrolysis , ulceration in psoriatic plaques
with methotrexate toxicity, erythema
recall after discontinuation of PUVA
therapy.










Drugs may increase Mtx. serum l evels( potential toxicity)displace from plasma proteins :Tetracylines , anticonvulsants, antipsychotic, chloraphenicol
phenytoin , phenothiazines.
Drugs may increase Mtx. Reducing renal excretion &
displace from plasma proteins :Sulfonamide, NSAID
Drugs may decrease Mtx. Serum level – other mechanism
Ciprofloxacin, penicilline, amiodarone
Mtx. May increase serum level of therse drugs
Xantines , thephyllines
Mtx. May decrease serum level of therse drugs
Ionotropic, digoxin
THERAPEUTIC GUIDELINES :



Various studies have shown that a single
dose
of 7.5 mg/ week is equally effective as
that of three doses of 2.5 mg/12 hrs
apart per week.
Folic acid supplementation (5 mg/ day
except
on methotrexate days) prevents G.I.T.
Text

Frequency

Complete blood count

Every 2-4 weeks for 1 months followed by once in 3 months,
lymphocyte count of less than 3500/ cu mm and platelet
count of less than 100,000/cu min indicate toxicity.

Liver enzymes

levels two times that of the baseline indicate hepatotoxicity.

(SGOT, SGPT)
Chest X-ray

At baseline and after 6 months

Liver biopsy

After cumulative dose of 1.5 g (usually 6 months) and after
every another 1.5 g of dose.
Biopsy grade

Liver histopathology

I

Normal,

mild

infiltration,

and

Remarks

fatty, MTX can be given
portal

inflammatiion
II

Moderate-to-severe
infiltration

and

fatty MTX can be given
portal

inflammation
IIIA

Mild fibrosis

MTX can be given but
another liver biopsy after
6 months

IIIB

Moderate-to-severe

MTX cannot be given

fibrosis
IV

Cirrhosis

MTX cannot be given.
Risk factors for methotrexate- induced
cirrhosis are :








Alcoholism
Past history of hepatitis
Obesity
Diabetes mellitus
Daily methotrexate regimens
cumulative dose exceeding 2.5 g
Impaired kidney function
Contraception for 3 months is required
INTRODUCTION :

Intravenous immunoglobulins are
heterogenous human gammaglobulins
containing IgG with trace of IgA and
IgM
prepared by cold ethanol
fractionalization
of pooled human sera harvested


IVIG is an important safe, effective (but
costly) therapeutic option an
immunomodulatory agent in the
management of skin disorders where
corticosteroids and immnosuppressive
agents cannot be used.






Peak serum level concentrations
occure immediately after intravenous
injection and are dose related .
Within 24 hrs , up to 30% of the dose may
be removed by catabolism and
distribution .
IVIg distributes itself throughout the
intravenous (60%) and extravascular
(40%)spaces , cross the placenta and
may be excreted in milk.
IV Immunoglobuline structure
Mechanism of action:




Suppression of antibody production
due to infusion of high doses of IVIG.
Suppression of idiotypic antiboides
(idiotype-antiidiotype interactions
regulate autoimmunity).
Saturation of Fc receptors on
macrophages (Fc receptors play role in
cytotoxic cell-mediated immunity and
opsonization).


Neutralization of microbe or toxin.



Inhibition of cytokines like IL-1, IL-6, and
TNF-α.



Superantigen neutralization



Modulation of complement activation.



Acceleration of IgG catabolism.
Indication

Doses and duration

Autoimmune bullous disorders, e.g., pemphigus
vulgaris

2g/kg i.v. single dose monthly or
1g/ kg/day× 3 days every month, or
0.5g/kg/day ×5 days every month

Toxic epidermal necrolysis
Autoimmne

connective

0.8-5.8 g/kg for 1-5 days
tissue

disorders,

e.g. 2g/kg i.v. single dose monthly for 2-4 months

dermatomyositis
Graft versus host disease (GVHD)

250-500 mg/kg weekly from day 8 to day-111
after BMT for pevention of GVHD
Indication

Doses and duration

Kawasaki disease

2 g/ kg i.v. as single dose

Hypersensitive dermatoses, e.g. autoimmune 0.4g/kg/day for 5 day
urticaria
Agammaglobulinemia/

hypogammaglobulinemia

> 0.25 g/kg every 3 weeks in childhood.
:

congenital

or

acquired
Scleromyxedema

2g/kg i.v. monthly for 3 months

Pyoderma gangrenosum

1-2/kg iv. monthly for 2-4 months
Side effects:Side effects are rare, mild and usually
self - limited and may be related to the
infusion rate. They can be prevented or
minimized by slowing the infusion rate or
By prior administration of intravenous
corticosteroids and antihistamines.


Common side effects are:Headache, backache, nausea/
vomiting,
chills, fever, myalgia.



Hypersensitivity reaction including
anaphylaxis (due to IVIG or thimerosal,
maltose, or sucrose in infusion solution) .


Acute renal failure (irreversible, IVIG
containing sucrose more likely to lead to
this
complicaton “osmotic nephrosis”)



Fluid overload and electrolyte
disturbances.




Hemolysis
Neutropenia.
Therapeutic Guidelines :Peak serum concentrations of IVIG are
achieved immediately following the
interavenous injection and is dose
related.
30% of the dose is eliminated by
catabolism
within 24 hr. Serum half life is 3-5 weeks.





All batches of IVIG should undergo testing
for
HIV, syphilis, hepatitis B, and hepatitis C


Anaphylaxis to IVIG is more common
when
IgA is deficient.



IVIG are the immunoglobulins,which can
interact with live virus vaccine. Such
vaccines should not be given 14 days
before or 3 months after IVIG
dministration.


IVIG has a theoretical risk of autoimmunity
owing to infusion of antiboides.



Sudden infusion of IVIG may suppress
antibody production and rebound flare up
can occur after the discontinuation of therapy.
High cost (for monthly Tt. Of a Pt. of 75 kg the average
cost / yr b/w 90,000 & 120,000 Euro) of this therapy IVIG
should be given to carefully selected patients
whose disease severity is recalcitrant to
alternative immunosuppressive therapies or who
experience or are at risk for significant
adverse effects these alternative therapies.
Methotrexate

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Methotrexate

  • 1.
  • 2. INTRODUCTION Methotrexate is a Antimetabolite agent with antiinflammatory properties and possibly immunosuppressive effect. In 1971 US FDA approve methotrexate for use in Psoriasis & for Rheumatoid arthritis in 1980. 
  • 3. STRUCTURE:  Methotrexate (4-amino-N methyl pteroylglutamic acid)is a potant competitive antagonist (inhibitor)of enzyme dihydrofolate reductase(DHFR). It is structurally similar to folic acid , the natural substrate for this enzyme .  Mtx. Differing from folic acid in only two areas:-
  • 5.    Methotrexate can be administrated orally ; intravenously , intramuscularly, or subcutaneously.It is rapidly absorbed through the G.I.T tract, although peak level occur more slowly (1 hr after ingestion)through this route than other two routes. The drug is well distributed throughout the body except in the brain, penetrating the blood brain barrier poorly (used intrathecal in some chemotherapy regimens). Once absorbed , the level of Mtx. in plasma has triphasic reduction (distribution , renal excretion , termination)
  • 6. (A) DNA Synthesis Effects: Inhibits DNA synthesis by competitively and irreversibly inhibiting enzyme, dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) which converts dihydrofolate to tetrahydrofolate essential for DNA synthesis.
  • 7. (B) Anti-inflamatory Effects: Methotrexate increases local concentration of adenosine, antiinflammatory mediator,by blocking AICART enzyme . It decreases the concentration of S-adenyl methionine (SAM, proinflammatory mediator) by blocking methionine synthetase.
  • 9. Indication :FDA-approved indication  •  Psoriasis including non- responsive or disabling plaque psoriasis of more than 20% BSA, psoriatic arthritis, pustular psoriasis, psoriatic erythroderma. Sezary syndrome.
  • 10. Off-lable use : Reiter's disease (For cutaneous and rheumatologic manifestations).  Dermatomyositis (useful predominantly for muscle involvement).  Sarcoidosis  Mycoses stage). (with systemic involvement) fungoides (Patch and plaque  Pemphigus vulgaris.
  • 11.    Pityriasis rubra pilaris (higher or double doses as compared to psoriasis). Crusted scabies. Vasculitis (as a steroid sparing agent) Dermatitis  Atopic dermatitis  Other dermatosis Sarcoidosis, keloides, lymphomatoid papulosis, keratoacanthomas, cutaneous crohn’s d’s.
  • 13. Relative C/I: Unreliable patient – including excessive alcohol intake.  Decrease renal function test(dose must be reduced).  Diabetes mellitus or obesity.  Severe hematologic abnormalities.  Man or woman contemplating conceptions(3 months off drug for man & off one ovulation cycle for woman)  Immunodeficiency syndrome
  • 14. Doses and preparations : 7.5-15 mg/ week (rarly exceeds 30 mg)  ORAL- Neotrexate, Mexate 2.5 mg tablet.  INJECTABLE- ( I.M, I.V, S.C ) Imutrex 15 mg/ ml (2 ml injection) .
  • 15. Adverse Effects:-  Systemic adverse effects :Mucositis, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, hepatotoxicity, pancytopenia, nephrotoxicity (with high doses), stress fractures.
  • 16. Cutaneous adverse effects:Aphthous stomatitis , alopecia, hyperpigmentation, toxic epidermal necrolysis , ulceration in psoriatic plaques with methotrexate toxicity, erythema recall after discontinuation of PUVA therapy.
  • 17.      Drugs may increase Mtx. serum l evels( potential toxicity)displace from plasma proteins :Tetracylines , anticonvulsants, antipsychotic, chloraphenicol phenytoin , phenothiazines. Drugs may increase Mtx. Reducing renal excretion & displace from plasma proteins :Sulfonamide, NSAID Drugs may decrease Mtx. Serum level – other mechanism Ciprofloxacin, penicilline, amiodarone Mtx. May increase serum level of therse drugs Xantines , thephyllines Mtx. May decrease serum level of therse drugs Ionotropic, digoxin
  • 18. THERAPEUTIC GUIDELINES :  Various studies have shown that a single dose of 7.5 mg/ week is equally effective as that of three doses of 2.5 mg/12 hrs apart per week. Folic acid supplementation (5 mg/ day except on methotrexate days) prevents G.I.T.
  • 19. Text Frequency Complete blood count Every 2-4 weeks for 1 months followed by once in 3 months, lymphocyte count of less than 3500/ cu mm and platelet count of less than 100,000/cu min indicate toxicity. Liver enzymes levels two times that of the baseline indicate hepatotoxicity. (SGOT, SGPT) Chest X-ray At baseline and after 6 months Liver biopsy After cumulative dose of 1.5 g (usually 6 months) and after every another 1.5 g of dose.
  • 20. Biopsy grade Liver histopathology I Normal, mild infiltration, and Remarks fatty, MTX can be given portal inflammatiion II Moderate-to-severe infiltration and fatty MTX can be given portal inflammation IIIA Mild fibrosis MTX can be given but another liver biopsy after 6 months IIIB Moderate-to-severe MTX cannot be given fibrosis IV Cirrhosis MTX cannot be given.
  • 21. Risk factors for methotrexate- induced cirrhosis are :        Alcoholism Past history of hepatitis Obesity Diabetes mellitus Daily methotrexate regimens cumulative dose exceeding 2.5 g Impaired kidney function Contraception for 3 months is required
  • 22.
  • 23. INTRODUCTION : Intravenous immunoglobulins are heterogenous human gammaglobulins containing IgG with trace of IgA and IgM prepared by cold ethanol fractionalization of pooled human sera harvested
  • 24.  IVIG is an important safe, effective (but costly) therapeutic option an immunomodulatory agent in the management of skin disorders where corticosteroids and immnosuppressive agents cannot be used.
  • 25.    Peak serum level concentrations occure immediately after intravenous injection and are dose related . Within 24 hrs , up to 30% of the dose may be removed by catabolism and distribution . IVIg distributes itself throughout the intravenous (60%) and extravascular (40%)spaces , cross the placenta and may be excreted in milk.
  • 27. Mechanism of action:   Suppression of antibody production due to infusion of high doses of IVIG. Suppression of idiotypic antiboides (idiotype-antiidiotype interactions regulate autoimmunity). Saturation of Fc receptors on macrophages (Fc receptors play role in cytotoxic cell-mediated immunity and opsonization).
  • 28.  Neutralization of microbe or toxin.  Inhibition of cytokines like IL-1, IL-6, and TNF-α.  Superantigen neutralization  Modulation of complement activation.  Acceleration of IgG catabolism.
  • 29. Indication Doses and duration Autoimmune bullous disorders, e.g., pemphigus vulgaris 2g/kg i.v. single dose monthly or 1g/ kg/day× 3 days every month, or 0.5g/kg/day ×5 days every month Toxic epidermal necrolysis Autoimmne connective 0.8-5.8 g/kg for 1-5 days tissue disorders, e.g. 2g/kg i.v. single dose monthly for 2-4 months dermatomyositis Graft versus host disease (GVHD) 250-500 mg/kg weekly from day 8 to day-111 after BMT for pevention of GVHD
  • 30. Indication Doses and duration Kawasaki disease 2 g/ kg i.v. as single dose Hypersensitive dermatoses, e.g. autoimmune 0.4g/kg/day for 5 day urticaria Agammaglobulinemia/ hypogammaglobulinemia > 0.25 g/kg every 3 weeks in childhood. : congenital or acquired Scleromyxedema 2g/kg i.v. monthly for 3 months Pyoderma gangrenosum 1-2/kg iv. monthly for 2-4 months
  • 31. Side effects:Side effects are rare, mild and usually self - limited and may be related to the infusion rate. They can be prevented or minimized by slowing the infusion rate or By prior administration of intravenous corticosteroids and antihistamines. 
  • 32. Common side effects are:Headache, backache, nausea/ vomiting, chills, fever, myalgia.  Hypersensitivity reaction including anaphylaxis (due to IVIG or thimerosal, maltose, or sucrose in infusion solution) .
  • 33.  Acute renal failure (irreversible, IVIG containing sucrose more likely to lead to this complicaton “osmotic nephrosis”)  Fluid overload and electrolyte disturbances.   Hemolysis Neutropenia.
  • 34. Therapeutic Guidelines :Peak serum concentrations of IVIG are achieved immediately following the interavenous injection and is dose related. 30% of the dose is eliminated by catabolism within 24 hr. Serum half life is 3-5 weeks.   All batches of IVIG should undergo testing for HIV, syphilis, hepatitis B, and hepatitis C
  • 35.  Anaphylaxis to IVIG is more common when IgA is deficient.  IVIG are the immunoglobulins,which can interact with live virus vaccine. Such vaccines should not be given 14 days before or 3 months after IVIG dministration.
  • 36.  IVIG has a theoretical risk of autoimmunity owing to infusion of antiboides.  Sudden infusion of IVIG may suppress antibody production and rebound flare up can occur after the discontinuation of therapy. High cost (for monthly Tt. Of a Pt. of 75 kg the average cost / yr b/w 90,000 & 120,000 Euro) of this therapy IVIG should be given to carefully selected patients whose disease severity is recalcitrant to alternative immunosuppressive therapies or who experience or are at risk for significant adverse effects these alternative therapies.