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  • Rheumatology
  • Palliative Care

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  • May 2023 Update

    Other practice-changing updates:

    Antibiotic prescribing in primary care: summary table

    • The freely available Antibiotic prescribing in primary care summary table has been updated to include temporary advice on alternative recommendations to first-line antibiotics for use in shortage situations. The listed alternatives should only be considered if first-line treatment is unavailable as the alternatives may be less efficacious, have a suboptimal spectrum of activity and have a less favourable harm–benefit profile.
    • Shortage of oral liquid formulations of some antibiotics is particularly an issue. To enable the preferred antibiotic to be used in children when an oral liquid formulation is not available, the summary table also includes temporary advice developed by The Society of Hospital Pharmacists of Australia, from Don’t Rush To Crush, on the suitability of crushing or dispersing oral solid-dose formulations. 
    • For more information about the development of the table, see the news article.

    Antibiotic guidelines 

    • The pneumonia topics have been updated to indicate that pneumonia can be a feature of coronavirus disease (COVID-19), and to provide links to the COVID-19 topic for resources on diagnosis and management. 

    Diabetes guidelines 

    • Following the discontinuation of the modified-release formulation of exenatide in Australia in 2021, the immediate-release formulation was discontinued in December 2022; there are now no formulations of exenatide available in Australia, so use of alternative glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists (dulaglutide, liraglutide, semaglutide) should be considered for type 2 diabetes in adults. 

    Fatigue guidelines 

    Pain and Analgesia guidelines 

    Sexual and Reproductive Health guidelines 

    Toxicology and Toxinology guidelines 

    • Ranitidine injection and tablets are currently suspended for use in Australia; alternative histamine H2-receptor antagonists (famotidine or nizatidine) are now recommended in combination with promethazine for the treatment of mild to moderate scombroid poisoning
  • November 2022 Update

    Cardiovascular guidelines

    • The alteplase recommendation for haemodynamically unstable pulmonary embolism has been amended to clarify that the total daily dose (including initial intravenous bolus dose) for patients less than 65 kg is 1.5 mg/kg. 
  • August 2022 Updates

    Other practice-changing updates:

    Antibiotic guidelines

    • The Australasian consensus guidelines for the management of invasive fungal disease and use of antifungal agents in the haematology/oncology setting were updated in 2021; all links to these guidelines have been updated.
    • All mentions of the bacterium, Clostridium difficile, have been updated to its new name, Clostridioides difficile.
    • In response to user feedback, printable summary tables of the indications and regimens for surgical antibiotic prophylaxis have been developed for most groups of procedures. A link to the summary table is included in each relevant section of the Surgical antibiotic prophylaxis for specific procedures topic, and a collation of all the summary tables is available via the ‘Quick links’ drop-down menu at the top of each page in Therapeutic Guidelines.
    • Advice on diagnosing and managing COVID-19 changes frequently. To improve access to the most up-to-date advice, a list of the most relevant Australian resources has been collated.
    • Primary prophylaxis for Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) is no longer recommended for adults with HIV infection who immediately start antiretroviral therapy. See here for further information.
    • The section on Management of neonates born to mothers with tuberculosis (TB) has been extensively revised following updates to a number of key state and international guidelines. Presumptive therapy for latent TB is now only recommended for neonates born to mothers with pulmonary TB if the mother is still considered infectious at the time of birth. Presumptive therapy for latent TB now includes the option of a 4-month rifampicin regimen.
    • Flucytosine injection is no longer available for induction therapy of cryptococcal meningitis and pulmonary cryptococcosis. Recommendations for these conditions have been updated—use oral flucytosine (or consider administration via a nasogastric tube), or seek expert advice for other treatment options.

    Pain and Analgesia guidelines

    • The modified-release morphine recommendation for chronic noncancer pain has been updated to clarify dosing for the 12-hour and 24-hour formulations.
    • Following updates to international guidelines, duloxetine is now the preferred drug for the management of painful chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy.
    • Paracetamol is a first-line analgesic in children. Information on paediatric-specific formulations has been added to support paracetamol use in this group.

    Respiratory guidelines

    • The new combination inhaler, fluticasone furoate+umeclidinium+vilanterol, has been added to the stepwise maintenance management of asthma for adults and adolescents for patients who continue to have uncontrolled asthma despite optimised dual therapy with an inhaled corticosteroid plus long-acting beta2 agonist. In these patients, therapy consists of either increasing the inhaled corticosteroid dose or adding a long-acting muscarinic antagonist. The role of type 2 airway inflammation in selecting appropriate therapy has been updated.

    Rheumatology guidelines

    • Advice on NSAID use during the perinatal period has been updated to reflect current evidence. In general, NSAIDs should be avoided in pregnancy and must be avoided after 30 weeks’ gestation.

    Toxicology and Toxinology guidelines

    • Updated intravenous calcium drug recommendations throughout Therapeutic Guidelines to address change in labelling of calcium gluconate and to emphasise mmol dosing.
  • May 2022 Updates

    Guidelines and topics reviewed

    Practice-changing updates to other guidelines

    The following practice-changing updates were included in Therapeutic Guidelines in May 2022. 

    Several functional improvements have been included in this release. The Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) pregnancy category and advice on drug compatibility with breastfeeding is now presented in a pop-up box when clicking on the pregnancy and breastfeeding buttons next to a drug recommendation, so users can access this information more directly. Links to the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) schedule have also been updated, with the PBS button next to a drug recommendation now linking directly to the relevant section of the PBS website, so the latest information is always provided.

    Antibiotic guidelines

    General

    • The ventrogluteal site is preferred for administration of intramuscular benzathine benzylpenicillin because of reduced pain and risk of nerve injury. Instructions on intramuscular injection of benzathine benzylpenicillin at the ventrogluteal site have been included.
    • Benzathine benzylpenicillin dosing has been streamlined for sore throat, impetigo, and prophylaxis for invasive group A streptococcal (iGAS) infection, with three weight-based bands recommended for dosing instead of five.
    • Advice on compatibility with breastfeeding for trimethoprim+sulfamethoxazole has been updated.
    • The primary care summary table has been updated to include the changes to management of sore throat.

    Liver abscess

    • Based on new evidence, an early switch to oral therapy can be considered for Klebsiella pneumoniae liver abscess in patients who are not critically ill and do not have metastatic infection.

    Antibiotic management of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)

    • Fever has been removed from the criteria for suspecting a bacterial cause of COPD exacerbation because it is not a sensitive marker for infection. The limited benefits of antibiotic therapy for bacterial exacerbations of COPD outside of the intensive care setting have been emphasised.

    Prevention of infective endocarditis

    • Studies have demonstrated that rheumatic heart disease is an independent risk factor for infective endocarditis and adverse outcomes from this disease. Therefore, infective endocarditis prophylaxis is now recommended for all patients with rheumatic heart disease undergoing certain procedures.
    • A footnote has been added to clarify that obstetric procedures (eg caesarean section) are not considered to be genitourinary procedures when discussing procedures for which endocarditis prophylaxis is recommended for patients with a specified cardiac condition.

    Impetigo

    • Advice has been added on the management of impetigo in patients receiving benzathine benzylpenicillin for prevention of recurrent acute rheumatic fever.

    Malaria

    • A quantitative test for assessing glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity to enable the safe use of tafenoquine is now available in Australia; the footnote about use of tafenoquine for radical cure of P. vivax malaria has been updated.

    Shingles

    • A footnote has been added to explain that the quantity of famciclovir listed on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme to treat shingles in patients who are not immunocompromised is not sufficient for the recommended course of treatment.

    Lyme disease

    • The Lyme disease topic now includes more detail on clinical manifestations; links to international publications on the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of Lyme disease; and a link to the recently published clinical pathway on debilitating symptom complexes attributed to ticks (DSCATT).

    Salmonella typhi and paratyphi A, B and C bacteraemia (typhoid and paratyphoid fever)

    • Due to increasing resistance rates, we now emphasise that ciprofloxacin should not be used to treat typhoid or paratyphoid fever unless susceptibility is confirmed, regardless of the country of acquisition.

    Bone and Metabolism guidelines

    • The place of romosozumab (a new monoclonal antibody that increases bone formation and bone mineral density) in the management of osteoporosis has been addressed—it is usually reserved for patients who experience a fracture while on antiresorptive therapy.

    Diabetes guidelines

    • Empagliflozin has now been approved by the Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration for use in patients with an estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) or creatinine clearance (CrCl) of 30 mL/min or more (previously 45 mL/min or more). The drug recommendation for empagliflozin for patients with type 2 diabetes has been updated.

    Liver Disorders guidelines

    Neurology guidelines

    • Several clinical studies have demonstrated that levetiracetam has similar efficacy to sodium valproate and phenytoin for treatment of status epilepticus. Levetiracetam is now recommended as an alternative first-line drug to treat status epilepticus in adults and children who continue to experience seizures after the administration of a benzodiazepine.

    Oral and Dental guidelines

    • The rationale for antibiotic choice for surgical prophylaxis for dental procedures has been clarified.
    • Romosozumab (a new monoclonal antibody for the treatment of osteoporosis) has been reported to be associated with medication-related osteonecrosis of the jaw, but the magnitude of the risk is unclear. Most patients receiving romosozumab would have had at least 12 months of therapy with an antiresorptive drug, so this should be considered when assessing the risk of medication-related osteonecrosis of the jaw in a patient taking romosozumab. If a bone-invasive dental procedure is required in a patient taking romosozumab, the benefits of continued therapy outweigh the low risk of medication-related osteonecrosis of the jaw in most patients.
    • The rankings for topical antifungals for oral candidiasis and angular cheilitis have been updated to reflect their similar efficacy; practical considerations on drug choice for oral candidiasis have also been included (eg amphotericin B lozenges may not be suitable for patients with a dry mouth).

    Pain and Analgesia guidelines

    • The Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration has added enhanced warnings to the product information and consumer medicines information for the gabapentinoids, gabapentin and pregabalin, to highlight the potential for misuse (pregabalin only), abuse and dependence. Advice on when to consider deprescribing gabapentinoids for chronic pain has been updated accordingly.

    Respiratory guidelines

    • New combination inhalers, mometasone+indacaterol and mometasone+indacaterol+glycopyrronium, have been added to the stepwise maintenance management of asthma for adults and adolescents.
    • New triple therapy combination inhalers, beclometasone+glycopyrronium+formoterol and budesonide+glycopyrronium+formoterol, have been added as options for patients who continue to have symptoms and exacerbations of COPD despite dual therapy with a long-acting bronchodilator and inhaled corticosteroid.
    • Dupilumab and omalizumab have now been approved by the Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration for use in adults with inadequately controlled chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps. The role of biologics for patients with chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps has been updated.
  • February 2022 Updates

    The following practice-changing updates were included in Therapeutic Guidelines in February 2022. 

    Antibiotic guidelines:

    • Antibiotics with activity against Pseudomonas aeruginosa are included in empirical regimens for severe diabetic foot infection. When intravenous ciprofloxacin is used to treat P. aeruginosa, it must be dosed 8-hourly (not 12-hourly). 
  • September 2021 Updates

    The following practice-changing updates were included in eTG complete in September 2021. 

    Antibiotic guidelines:

    • Based on new evidence, residence in a correctional facility has been included as a risk factor for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infection.
  • July 2021 Updates

    The following practice-changing updates were included in eTG complete in July 2021. 

    Antibiotic guidelines

    Sexual and Reproductive Health guidelines 

    • Rhesus antibody testing and anti-D immunoglobulin use is no longer recommended for medical abortion before 10 weeks’ gestation based on updated advice from the National Blood Authority and RANZCOG. 
  • March 2021 Updates

    Guidelines reviewed


    Practice-changing updates to other guidelines

    As well as including a comprehensive update to the Developmental Disability and Psychotropic guidelines, the March 2021 release of eTG complete also includes the following practice-changing updates to other guidelines. With each release, we are also continuing to implement drug name changes in line with the Therapeutic Goods Administration.

    Antibiotic guidelines

    • In patients undergoing surgical abortion, age is one of several criteria for assessing the risk of concurrent sexually transmitted infection. Criteria have been amended in the topic ‘Surgical antibiotic prophylaxis for specific procedures’ to clarify that individuals aged 20 years or younger are at higher risk than those older than 20 years. 
    Gastrointestinal guidelines

    • Patients taking an SGLT2 inhibitor are at increased risk of euglycaemic diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) when undergoing a procedure, and this risk is increased if the patient has been fasting, has very restricted dietary intake or has undergone bowel preparation. The topic ‘Preparation for gastrointestinal procedures’ has been updated to highlight this risk; it now includes links to the Diabetes guidelines for more detail on management, and links to alerts issued by the Australian Diabetes Society and Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration. 
    Respiratory guidelines

    • Beclometasone+formoterol has now been approved by the Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) for use in adults with asthma who require Step 3 maintenance and reliever therapy, or Step 3 or Step 4 maintenance therapy. Drug recommendations for beclometasone+formoterol have been added.  
    • A link has been added to the recently published Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand position statement on diagnosis and management of connective tissue disease–associated interstitial lung disease.
    Sexual and Reproductive Health guidelines

    • Serum human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG) measurement helps guide the timing of an ultrasound scan to confirm intrauterine pregnancy before medical abortion. Detail has been added to clarify how to use hCG measurements to guide timing of ultrasound for very early gestations (less than 5 to 6 weeks). 
  • December 2020 Updates

    Guidelines reviewed


    Practice-changing updates to other guidelines

    As well as including a comprehensive update to the Liver Disorders, Pain and Analgesia, Respiratory and Sexual and Reproductive Health guidelines, the December 2020 release of eTG complete also includes the following practice-changing updates to other guidelines. With each release, we are also continuing to implement drug name changes in line with the Therapeutic Goods Administration.

    Cardiovascular guidelines

    • Combination therapy with an endothelin receptor antagonist and a phosphodiesterase type 5 (PDE5) inhibitor is now available on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme for pulmonary hypertension.
    • The immediate-release formulation of nifedipine was discontinued in Australia in October 2020. A footnote has been added to drug recommendations for immediate-release nifedipine to explain this.

    Diabetes guidelines

    • Dulaglutide is now indicated as an adjunct to standard of care therapy to reduce the risk of major adverse cardiovascular events in adults with type 2 diabetes who have established cardiovascular disease or multiple cardiovascular risk factors. The drug recommendation for dulaglutide for patients with type 2 diabetes has now been updated.

    Oral and Dental guidelines

    • Advice on using paracetamol and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) in patients with cirrhosis has been updated in line with new advice in the Pain and Analgesia guidelines.

    Rheumatology guidelines

    • Advice on using paracetamol and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) in patients with cirrhosis has been updated in line with new advice in the Pain and Analgesia guidelines.

    Toxicology and Toxinology guidelines

    • Additional information has been added about avoiding adrenaline in most antipsychotic drug poisonings, as it can worsen hypotension.
    • A dose of sodium thiosulphate can be used as part of the management of cyanide poisoning. Sometimes a repeat dose is needed. Based on feedback and current references, the repeat dose has been reduced to half of the first dose (rather than the same as the first dose).
  • August 2020 Updates

    Guidelines reviewed


    Practice-changing updates to other guidelines

    As well as including a comprehensive revision of the Toxicology and Toxinology guidelines, the August 2020 release of eTG complete also includes the following practice-changing updates to other guidelines. With each release, we are also continuing to implement drug name changes in line with the Therapeutic Goods Administration.

    Antibiotic guidelines

    • Tinidazole was discontinued in Australia in February 2020. A footnote about this has been added to tinidazole drug recommendations; metronidazole is recommended as an alternative when an oral nitroimidazole is required.
    • Amphotericin B lipid complex is no longer registered for use in Australia, but is available via the Special Access Scheme. A footnote about this change in availability has been added to amphotericin B lipid complex drug recommendations.
    • The empirical recommendations for sepsis and septic shock from a biliary or gastrointestinal tract source have been updated to ensure patients with acalculous cholecystitis who have penicillin hypersensitivity receive antibiotic therapy with activity against Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
    • New data are available on the safety of erythromycin use in early pregnancy. The erythromycin entry in ‘Drug use in pregnancy and breastfeeding’ has been updated to include links to the relevant publications.
    • Combination therapy with flucloxacillin and vancomycin was observed in a recent randomised controlled trial to be associated with nephrotoxicity. Despite this, combination therapy continues to be recommended for initial therapy for Staphylococcus aureus bacteraemia to ensure adequate treatment of both methicillin-susceptible and methicillin-resistant strains. New advice is included to limit the duration of combination therapy to 48 hours.
    • Vancomycin dosage adjustments should be made in a linear manner. Updated guidance on the practical application of linear dosage adjustments is included.
    • A recent randomised controlled trial showed that a single dose of amoxicillin+clavulanate reduced the incidence of maternal infection after assisted (vacuum or forceps) vaginal delivery. Advice on which women should receive prophylaxis and what drug should be used has been added.

    Cardiovascular guidelines

    • A comment has been added to ‘Venous thromboembolism: prophylaxis’ topic to clarify that optimal prophylaxis in obese patients has not been fully determined. Expert advice is recommended for drug choice and dosing.

    Dermatology guidelines

    • The ‘Vulvovaginitis in girls’ topic has been updated to reflect that candidal vulvovaginitis occurs very rarely in prepubertal girls, rather than not occurring in this patient group.

    Diabetes guidelines

    • Dapagliflozin has now been approved by the Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) for use in patients with a creatinine clearance of 45 mL/min or more (previously 60 mL/min or more), as for all other sodium-glucose co-transporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitors available in Australia. The drug recommendation for dapagliflozin for patients with type 2 diabetes has been updated.
    • The Lantus brand of insulin glargine 100 units/mL has been discontinued in Australia and replaced by the Optisulin brand, which is made by the same drug company and is therapeutically identical. Optisulin has been added to the list of available insulin formulations in Table 18.4.
  • March 2020 Updates

    Practice-changing updates

    The March 2020 release of eTG complete includes a new topic on coronavirus disease (COVID-19), with links to useful resources, and the following practice-changing updates to specific guidelines. With each release, we are also continuing to implement drug name changes in line with the Therapeutic Goods Administration.

    Antibiotic guidelines

    • To help users navigate the sepsis topics, the categories applied in these guidelines to antibiotic regimens for sepsis or septic shock have been defined. A new table summarises the empirical regimens for sepsis or septic shock when the source of infection is not known. A list summarising the pathogen-specific regimens for bloodstream infections has also been added.
    • In the topic on ‘Pneumonia diagnosis and follow-up’, the statement on repeat chest X-ray has been reworded to clarify that a repeat chest X-ray is only recommended 6 to 8 weeks after the episode of pneumonia for patients in whom there is a clinical suspicion of lung malignancy (eg elderly, smokers).
    • The intravenous dose of trimethoprim+sulfamethoxazole for add-on empirical therapy for meningitis and encephalitis in patients with risk factors for Listeria infection, and for directed therapy of Listeria meningoencephalitis, has been updated to align with standard references.
    • The oral dose of trimethoprim+sulfamethoxazole for extended treatment of Listeria meningoencephalitis has been changed to a 12-hourly dosing schedule to improve patient adherence and avoid tablet splitting.
    • All trimethoprim+sulfamethoxazole 5+25 mg/kg doses for adults have been capped at 96 kg to avoid overdosing in obese patients. This equates to a maximum unit dose of 480+2400 mg.
    • Isavuconazole is now registered for use in Australia, so the footnote about availability through the Special Access Scheme has been deleted from the Aspergillosis section.

    Dermatology guidelines

    • The time needed to store clothes, towels and bedding in a sealed plastic bag to prevent transmission of scabies has been increased to 8 days in line with new evidence.

    Gastrointestinal guidelines

    • Table 6.22 (Oral 5-aminosalicylate preparations and dosages for ulcerative colitis) has been updated to reflect the change in criteria for accessing oral mesalazine on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS)—for the treatment of ulcerative colitis, oral mesalazine is no longer reserved for patients with a documented history of a hypersensitivity reaction to a sulfonamide, or those intolerant to sulfasalazine.

    Psychotropic guidelines

  • December 2019 Updates

    Guidelines reviewed


    Practice-changing updates to other guidelines

    As well as including a comprehensive update to the Oral and Dental guidelines, the December 2019 release of eTG complete also includes the following practice-changing updates to other guidelines.

    Antibiotic guidelines

    Cardiovascular guidelines

    • A footnote has been added to acknowledge the recommendation to use the sexless CHA2DS2-VASc score to stratify stroke risk in patients with ‘nonvalvular’ atrial fibrillation in the National Heart Foundation of Australia and the Cardiac Society of Australia and New Zealand clinical guidelines for the diagnosis and management of atrial fibrillation 2018. <www.heartlungcirc.org/article/S1443-9506(18)31778-5/fulltex>
    • The dosing of danaparoid for treatment of heparin-induced thrombocytopenia has been updated to align with the Thrombosis and Haemostasis Society of Australia and New Zealand (THANZ) consensus statement on diagnosis and management of heparin-induced thrombocytopenia. <www.thanz.org.au/resources/thanz-guidelines>

    Dermatology guidelines

    • The management of primary oral mucocutaneous herpes has been updated to include currently available topical analgesics and anaesthetics. Episodic antiviral therapy for a minor recurrence in immunocompetent adults now includes a single dose of oral famciclovir.

    Neurology guidelines

    Psychotropic guidelines

    • A footnote to alert users to the discontinuation of trifluoperazine and fluphenazine has been added.
    • Sources of information for psychotropic drug use during pregnancy and while breastfeeding have been updated.