Vol. 36 No. 5 (2019): October
Documents

Consensus of infectious complications in patients treated with selected biological therapies: first Part

Inés Cerón
Pontifica Universidad Católica de Chile
Pilar Gambra
Clínica Santa María
Cecilia Vizcaya
Pontifica Universidad Católica de Chile
Marcela Ferres
Pontifica Universidad Católica de Chile
Teresa Bidart
Pontifica Universidad Católica de Chile
Tania López
Pontifica Universidad Católica de Chile
M. Paz Acuña
Pontifica Universidad Católica de Chile
Ana M. Álvarez
Hospital San Juan de Dios
Marcela Zubieta
Hospital Exequiel González Cortés
Marcela Rabello
Hospital Dr. Luis Calvo Mackenna
Mirentxu Iruretagoyena
Pontifica Universidad Católica de Chile
Ricardo Rabagliati
Pontifica Universidad Católica de Chile

Published 2019-11-25

How to Cite

1.
Cerón I, Gambra P, Vizcaya C, Ferres M, Bidart T, López T, Acuña MP, Álvarez AM, Zubieta M, Rabello M, Iruretagoyena M, Rabagliati R. Consensus of infectious complications in patients treated with selected biological therapies: first Part. Rev. Chilena. Infectol. [Internet]. 2019 Nov. 25 [cited 2025 Dec. 19];36(5). Available from: https://revinf.cl/index.php/revinf/article/view/600

Abstract

The use of biological therapies has meant a great improvement in the management of several conditions like autoimmune, neoplastic or others diseases. Although its use has implied significant improvements in the prognosis of these diseases, it is not exempt from complications: infectious diseases as one of them. The objective of this consensus was to evaluate, from an infectious viewpoint, the safeness of the most frequently used biological therapies and give recommendations for the prevention of infections in patients treated with these drugs. These recommendations were based on the highest quality evidence available for the selected biologics. The consensus counts of two manuscripts. This first part details the risks of developing infectious complications depending on the type of biological used for a certain pathology. This evaluation included a broad search in MEDLINE and Epistemonikos of systematic reviews and meta-analyzes of controlled clinical trials and case- control examining post-treatment infections with anti-TNF alpha, anti-CD20, anti-CD52, CTLA4-Ig and anti-integrins. The research was complemented by a review of: multicentre cohorts of biological users, the MMWR of the CDC, Atlanta, U.S.A., and national registers and scientific societies in which infectious complications derived from the use of biological therapies were mentioned.