Treatment options for VEXAS syndrome

TreatmentEffectivenessConsiderations
Glucocorticoids Highly effective, but difficult to taper off in the absence of other therapies, and treatment-free remissions are rare4  Infection risk; chronic glucocorticoid therapy–associated effects such as posterior subcapsular cataracts, hyperglycemia and dyslipidemia, adrenal insufficiency, and osteopenia 
Older rheumatologic DMARDs (eg, methotrexate), anti-B-cell therapies (eg, rituximab) Low rate of effectiveness Cytopenias and opportunistic infection risk; anti-B-cell therapies can worsen lymphopenia 
Anticytokine or other immunomodulatory therapies (eg, interferon, anti-TNF antibodies, IL-6 inhibitors such as tocilizumab, IL-1 inhibitor anakinra) Anecdotes of favorable responses in inflammatory symptoms5  Infection risk; report of a severe injection site reaction with anakinra; no effect on cytopenias, if present 
JAK inhibitors Benefit reported with ruxolitinib6 and upadcitinib,7 including ability to decrease or discontinue corticosteroids; ongoing trials of pacritinib Cytopenias (eg, worsening of anemia) and potential infection risk 
DNA methyltransferase inhibitors (azacitidine, decitabine) High response rate with azacitidine in both inflammatory and hematologic findings regardless of cytopenias, as described by the FRENVEX group and in other series Cytopenias, infections (likely due to concomitant or prior use of immunosuppressants); potential reimbursement barriers when coding VEXAS syndrome rather than MDS; discontinuation results in prompt relapse, but patients may respond again with therapy reinitiation; few reported data on decitabine so far 
Allogeneic HCT Can be curative, but most patients with VEXAS syndrome have features of lower-risk MDS and would not typically undergo transplant; encouraging experience with reduced-intensity conditioning approaches Transplant-associated morbidity and mortality; access barriers and high cost 
TreatmentEffectivenessConsiderations
Glucocorticoids Highly effective, but difficult to taper off in the absence of other therapies, and treatment-free remissions are rare4  Infection risk; chronic glucocorticoid therapy–associated effects such as posterior subcapsular cataracts, hyperglycemia and dyslipidemia, adrenal insufficiency, and osteopenia 
Older rheumatologic DMARDs (eg, methotrexate), anti-B-cell therapies (eg, rituximab) Low rate of effectiveness Cytopenias and opportunistic infection risk; anti-B-cell therapies can worsen lymphopenia 
Anticytokine or other immunomodulatory therapies (eg, interferon, anti-TNF antibodies, IL-6 inhibitors such as tocilizumab, IL-1 inhibitor anakinra) Anecdotes of favorable responses in inflammatory symptoms5  Infection risk; report of a severe injection site reaction with anakinra; no effect on cytopenias, if present 
JAK inhibitors Benefit reported with ruxolitinib6 and upadcitinib,7 including ability to decrease or discontinue corticosteroids; ongoing trials of pacritinib Cytopenias (eg, worsening of anemia) and potential infection risk 
DNA methyltransferase inhibitors (azacitidine, decitabine) High response rate with azacitidine in both inflammatory and hematologic findings regardless of cytopenias, as described by the FRENVEX group and in other series Cytopenias, infections (likely due to concomitant or prior use of immunosuppressants); potential reimbursement barriers when coding VEXAS syndrome rather than MDS; discontinuation results in prompt relapse, but patients may respond again with therapy reinitiation; few reported data on decitabine so far 
Allogeneic HCT Can be curative, but most patients with VEXAS syndrome have features of lower-risk MDS and would not typically undergo transplant; encouraging experience with reduced-intensity conditioning approaches Transplant-associated morbidity and mortality; access barriers and high cost 

Many relevant case reports and series could not be cited here because of limitations on reference number.

DMARD, disease-modifying antirheumatic drug; TNF, tumor necrosis factor.

or Create an Account

Close Modal
Close Modal