Core EM - Emergency Medicine Podcast

Episode 211: Granulomatosis with Polyangiitis

Granulomatosis with Polyangiitis (GPA) – Recognition and Management in the ED Hosts: Phoebe Draper, MD Brian Gilberti, MD https://media.blubrry.com/coreem/content.blubrry.com/coreem/GPA.mp3 Download One Comment Tags: Rheumatology Show Notes Background A vasculitis affecting small blood vessels causing inflammation and necrosis Affects upper respiratory tract (sinusitis, otitis media, saddle nose deformity), lungs (nodules, alveolar hemorrhage), and kidneys (rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis) Can lead to multi-organ failure, pulmonary hemorrhage, renal failure Red Flag Symptoms: Chronic sinus symptoms Hemoptysis (especially bright red blood) New pulmonary complaints Renal dysfunction Constitutional symptoms (fatigue, weight loss, fever) Workup in the ED: CBC, CMP for anemia and AKI Urinalysis with microscopy (hematuria, RBC casts) Chest imaging (CXR or CT for nodules, cavitary lesions) ANCA testing (not immediately available but important diagnostically) Management: Stable patients: Outpatient workup, urgent rheumatology consult, prednisone 1 mg/kg/day Unstable patients: High-dose IV steroids (methylprednisolone 1 g daily x3 days), consider plasma exchange, cyclophosphamide or rituximab initiation, ICU admission Conditions that Mimic GPA: Goodpasture syndrome (anti-GBM antibodies) TB, fungal infections Lung malignancy Other vasculitides (EGPA, MPA, lupus) ANCA Testing Utility: C-ANCA/PR3-ANCA positive in 80-90% of GPA cases P-ANCA/MPO-ANCA more common in MPA Don’t delay treatment while awaiting results if suspicion is high Outcomes: Without treatment: Fatal within a year (renal failure, respiratory complications) With treatment: 5-year survival ~75-90%, but ~50% relapse rate Long-term rheumatology follow-up is essential Take-Home Points: Always include vasculitis in the differential for unexplained respiratory, renal, or systemic symptoms. Recognize pulmonary-renal syndromes early. Initiate high-dose steroids immediately for unstable patients without waiting for ANCA results. GPA is rare but life-threatening – early recognition saves lives. Read More

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