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mrsb04 wrote: Good morning sleev-les
Welcome to the club, I had never heard of a Catahoula Leopard Dog until you joined.
The international ITP treatment guidelines were updated last year and can be found at found at the link below.
ashpublications.org/bloodadvances/article/3/22/3780/428877/Updated-international-consensus-report-on-the (the link looks weird but works)
The guidelines state "Recommendations for initial treatment of newly diagnosed patients
1] Corticosteroids are the standard initial treatment for adults with ITP who need treatment and do not have a relative contradiction: predniso(lo)ne at 1 mg/kg (maximum dose 80 mg, even in patients weighing >80 kg) for 2 weeks, to a maximum of 3 weeks, or dexamethasone 40 mg/d for 4 days, repeated up to 3 times.
2] If a response is seen (eg, platelets >50 × 109/L), the predniso(lo)ne should be tapered, aiming to stop predniso(lo)ne by 6 weeks (maximum 8 weeks), even if the platelet count drops during the taper.
3] If there is no response to the initial dose within 2 weeks, the predniso(lo)ne should be tapered rapidly over 1 week and stopped.
4] Longer courses of steroids should be avoided, although occasional patients may benefit from continuous low-dose corticosteroids
(eg, ≤5 mg/d). This type of ongoing low-dose corticosteroid treatment should be based on the individual patient’s needs, prior therapies, and so forth.
Corticosteroids remain the standard initial treatment of newly diagnosed patients and should be used for a limited time. Corticosteroids have multiple beneficial.hemostatic effects on platelets by decreasing platelet clearance and increasing platelet production. Additionally, they may reduce bleeding, independent of the platelet count increase, via a direct effect on blood vessels. Although the consensus panel believed that some patients were able to maintain a platelet response to a daily dose of predniso(lo)ne ≤ 5 mg, the side effects of corticosteroids outweigh their benefits in the long-term".
I would imagine they want you off pred asap as
a] high dose steroids in Type 1 diabetics is never a good idea especially for those who already have retinopathy. Please make sure that your kidney function is monitored regularly you don't want nephropathy too.
b] Your immune system is now suppressed during a Coronavirus pandemic.
There are many medical treatments you can try. The guidelines explain them well. One is Rituximab, UK ITP association has recommended not using that during the pandemic. Personally I would ask for a TPO-RA. I wish I had been put straight onto them instead of trying various others first none of which worked and had horrid side effects. Don't even consider a splenectomy at this stage, the guidelines are quite firm on that.
The most annoying thing about ITP is stability of platelet count is not guaranteed and even if one manages to achieve stability things can cause a drop. I only have to get a sniff of a virus and my count tanks down, but a short blast of pred for 3-4 days usually brings it up again.
mrsb04 wrote: Over here in the UK on that dose of Pred alone you would be classed as being in the high clinically vulnerable category and advised to stay at home excepting emergencies. Then you have to at Rituximab into the mix
mrsb04 wrote: Sleev-les
"Immunocompromised state (weakened immune system) from blood, bone marrow, or organ transplant; HIV; use of corticosteroids; or use of other immune weakening medicines" www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/need-extra-precautions/people-with-medical-conditions.html#immunocompromised-state
I am careful regardless on where I'm heading as my wife is pregnant. You are a diabetic the fact that your wife is pregnant is irrelevant. "Having type 2 diabetes increases your risk of severe illness from COVID-19. Based on what we know at this time, having type 1 or gestational diabetes may increase your risk of severe illness from COVID-19." www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/need-extra-precautions/people-with-medical-conditions.html#diabetes
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