DEVELOPMENT SITE ONLY
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
RECOGNITION AND ASSESSMENT
Symptoms and signs
- Aged ≥50 yr
- Sudden onset of unilateral headache
- Scalp tenderness
- temporal artery tenderness
- nodularity
- reduced pulsations
- Visual symptoms e.g.
- amaurosis fugax
- diplopia
- blurred vision
- changes to colour vision
- Constitutional symptoms e.g.
- fever
- sweats
- weight loss
- Limb/jaw claudication
- Polymyalgic symptoms
- pain and stiffness of hip and shoulder girdles
Investigations
- FBC
- U&Es
- CRP (≥10)
- if inflammation levels are lower but high clinical suspicion present, discuss with on-call rheumatologist
- ESR (≥50)
- LFT
- Bone profile
- Serum electrophoresis
- Bence-Jones proteins
- especially if ESR raised out of proportion to CRP
- Screening tests for serious infections
- Chest X-Ray
- Dipstick urine and MC&S
- if positive, blood cultures
- Temporal artery ultrasound scan (TA USS), also includes axillary artery scan
- perform as soon as possible and ≤2 weeks of commencing prednisolone
- performed at Bradwell Hospital (refer to rheumatology on-call for review and organising TA USS only)
- Temporal artery biopsy (TA Bx)
- perform as soon as possible and ≤2 weeks of commencing prednisolone
- rheumatology/ophthalmology to refer to vascular surgery
- If patient has constitutional symptoms, PET CT scan/MR angiography of aorta/CT angiography of aorta and branches
- involvement of aorta and branches may be asymptomatic
Differential diagnosis
- In the younger age group Takayasu arteritis
- Other causes of headaches (migraine, sinusitis)
- Occipital neuralgia
- Systemic vasculitis
IMMEDIATE TREATMENT
End organ damage – visual loss, stroke constitutes severe case
- Methylprednisolone 500 mg–1 g daily IV for 3 days
- do not wait for blood test results before administering initial dose
- if IV not possible commence prednisolone 60-100 mg oral daily for 3 days
No end organ damage
- Jaw claudication/visual disturbance
- commence prednisolone 60 mg daily
- No jaw claudication/visual disturbance
- commence prednisolone 40 mg daily
Who to contact
If visual symptoms present
- Contact ophthalmology on-call
If no visual symptoms present
- Contact rheumatology on-call (0900–1900 hr, via switchboard or as an inpatient Careflow referral)
Monitoring during prednisolone taper
- Relapse of headache symptoms or jaw/tongue claudication
- increase steroids back up to 40–60 mg daily and discuss with rheumatology on-call
- Constitutional symptoms persist or recur (weight loss, fever, night sweats, anaemia, persistent acute phase response, new/recurrent PMR symptoms, limb claudication, abdominal pain or back pain) discuss with rheumatology on-call:
- PET CT scan
- increasing steroids (after PET CT if possible) or adding in steroid sparing agents
SUBSEQUENT MANAGEMENT
- Refer to rheumatology outpatients
- Continue prednisolone 40–60 mg daily for 3 weeks (until normalisation of inflammatory markers), then
- reduction at 10 mg every 2 weeks until daily dose 20 mg, then
- reduction at 2.5 mg every 2 weeks until daily dose 10 mg, then
- reduction at 1 mg every month
- If unable to reduce steroids, steroid sparing agents (methotrexate, leflunomide) and possibly a biologic agent (tocilizumab is available for use for a limited period) to be considered at rheumatology outpatient review
- Commence gastroprotection with omeprazole 20 mg daily
- If aged <70 yr, commence bone protection with calcium and vitamin D supplements (Calcichew® D3 Forte or Adcal® D3)
- If patient aged ≥70 yr, no contraindication and tolerated, commence oral bisphosphonates (alendronate 70 mg once weekly)
- Check FRAX (https://frax.shef.ac.uk/) score to plan need for a DEXA scan on Careflow
- No indication for anti-platelet treatment (follow National guidance for secondary prevention of cardiovascular and other atherosclerotic diseases, where applicable)
- No indication for cholesterol lowering agent (follow National guidance for secondary prevention of cardiovascular and other atherosclerotic diseases, where applicable)
DISCHARGE AND FOLLOW-UP
- If no visual symptoms - rheumatology follow-up
- If visual loss present - joint ophthalmology and rheumatology follow-up
- Joint follow-up with other involved specialities (stroke/neurology/vascular surgery)