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Diagnosis
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1 |
C-LD |
1. In patients with large vessel vasculitis (LVV), prompt evaluation of the entire aorta and branch vessels with MRI or CT, with or without 18F-FDG positron emission tomography (FDG-PET), is recommended.1–6
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Treatment
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1 |
B-NR |
2. In patients with active GCA or Takayasu arteritis, initial medical therapy should include high-dose glucocorticoids.7–12
|
1 |
B-R |
3. In patients with GCA who have evidence of active aortitis, tocilizumab is recommended as adjunctive therapy to glucocorticoids, with methotrexate as an alternative.7,13,14
|
1 |
C-LD |
4. In all patients with Takayasu arteritis, non-biological disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (DMARD) should be given in combination with glucocorticoids.7,15,16
|
1 |
C-LD |
5. In patients with active GCA or Takayasu arteritis, treatment efficacy should be periodically assessed by monitoring inflammatory serum markers (C-reactive protein and erythrocyte sedimentation rate), imaging with CT, MRI, or FDG-PET, and clinical symptoms.1,7,15,17–20
|
2a |
C-LD |
6. In patients with GCA or Takayasu arteritis who are in remission, elective endovascular or open surgical intervention is reasonable to treat aortic and branch vessel complications.7,21
|
2a |
C-EO |
7. In patients with GCA or Takayasu arteritis and aortic involvement who are in remission, annual surveillance imaging with CT, MRI, or FDG-PET is reasonable.1,7,17–19
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