Episode 211: Granulomatosis with Polyangiitis - podcast episode cover

Episode 211: Granulomatosis with Polyangiitis

Jul 01, 2025Ep. 211
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Episode description

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.

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