Mycophenolate and methotrexate are better tolerated than azathioprine in myasthenia gravis.

Neuromuscul Disord

Manchester Centre for Clinical Neuroscience, Northern Care Alliance NHS Foundation Trust, Salford Royal, Stott Lane, Salford, M6 8HD, UK; The University of Manchester, Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, Core Technology Facility, Manchester, M13 9WU, UK.

Published: May 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Azathioprine is the first choice medicine for treating myasthenia gravis, but many people also use mycophenolate and methotrexate as alternatives.
  • A survey of 235 people found that azathioprine caused liver problems in 23% of users, mycophenolate led to diarrhea in 14%, and methotrexate made 18% feel tired.
  • Women generally have more side effects from these medicines, and azathioprine is often stopped more often than the other two due to these side effects, showing there’s a need for better treatments.

Article Abstract

Azathioprine is recommended as the first-line steroid-sparing immunosuppressive agent for myasthenia gravis. Mycophenolate and methotrexate are often considered as second-line choices despite widespread consensus on their efficacy. We aimed to gather real-world data comparing the tolerability and reasons for discontinuation for these agents, by performing a national United Kingdom survey of side effects and reasons for discontinuation of immunosuppressants in myasthenia gravis. Of 235 patients, 166 had taken azathioprine, 102 mycophenolate, and 40 methotrexate. The most common side effects for each agent were liver dysfunction for azathioprine (23 %), diarrhoea for mycophenolate (14 %), and fatigue for methotrexate (18 %). Women were generally more likely to experience side effects of immunosuppressants. Azathioprine was significantly more likely to be discontinued than mycophenolate and methotrexate due to side effects. There was no significant difference in treatment cessation due to lack of efficacy. This study highlights the significant side-effect burden of treatment for myasthenia gravis. Mechanisms to reduce azathioprine toxicity should be utilised, however mycophenolate and methotrexate appear to be good treatment choices if teratogenicity is not a concern. Women are disadvantaged due to higher frequency of side effects and considerations around pregnancy and breastfeeding. Treatments with improved tolerability are needed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nmd.2024.03.010DOI Listing

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