Methotrexate compared with chemotherapy
Methotrexate attracts a lot of bad press due to the fact it is used in very high dosages for cancer treatment.
Methotrexate Compared With Chemotherapy
Linda Bradbury
Nurse Practitioner, Rheumatology, University of Queensland
President, Rheumatology Health Professionals Australia
Methotrexate is one of those disease-modifying agents that specialists will often use as a first line of treatment. It’s an excellent drug for managing patients with particularly rheumatoid arthritis and psoriatic arthritis.
Dr. Irwin Lim
Rheumatologist
Methotrexate is really our anchor drug in rheumatoid arthritis, so it’s the drug the vast majority of rheumatologists would like to use front up in treating rheumatoid arthritis. The problem is that methotrexate attracts a lot of bad press.
Linda Bradbury
Nurse Practitioner, Rheumatology, University of Queensland
President, Rheumatology Health Professionals Australia
There are various myths around that is about methotrexate. Methotrexate is used as an anti-cancer treatment but this is in much higher doses than the doses that we’re using for patients with arthritis. So although you will read out there and people will tell you that it’s a cancer drug, it’s really bad for you; actually the doses that we use in arthritis are much, much lower.
Dr. Samuel Whittle
Rheumatologist, The Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Adelaide
Sometimes it unfairly attracts a bad reputation. Part of that is due to the fact that methotrexate is also used for the treatment of some cancers but in a much, much higher dose than we use in rheumatology. So in fact when it’s used as a cancer chemotherapy drug, the way that it works in the body is completely different to the way that it works in rheumatology; where we use it at an extremely low dose. In fact, it’s a tablet that’s only taken once a week. When it’s taken weekly it’s very effective at treating rheumatoid arthritis. It often takes a few weeks for it to build up enough in the system to begin to work but once it’s begun to work, it often has very sustained effectiveness over a long period of time.
Dr. Irwin Lim
Rheumatologist
But when it’s used as chemotherapy it’s using grams by a drip in hospital. When we rheumatologists use methotrexate it’s typically at a standard dose of about 20 mg once a week by mouth. So in our hands the doses are very much lower and it’s clearly not chemotherapy.
Confirming diagnosis

Initial GP visit

Key questions & history taking

Piecing the symptoms together

Referral to rheumatologist

Visiting Physio or GP

Other therapies

What is a rheumatologist?

Preparing for first consultation

Questions rheumatologists will ask

Tests rheumatologists may conduct

Your online research

Rheumatologists can help

Tips and suggestions

Living well with arthritis

Next steps after diagnosis

Reaction to diagnosis

Finding a supportive environment

Working to achieve your goals

Working with your rheumatologist

Developing a working relationship

Treatment management

Personalising treatment plans

Lifestyle management sleep & smoking

Lifestyle management exercise

What is adherence

Exercise

Finding the right treatment

Understanding side effects

Side effects vs benefits

Risk of avoiding medications

Importance of monitoring side effects

Considering the immune system

NSAIDs

Immediate treatment

Introduction to methotrexate

Methotrexate compared with chemotherapy

Methotrexate early side effects

DMARDs

Introduction to biological treatment

Ankylosing spondylitis & biologics

Moving to biological treatment

Biologics are they for you?

Finding the best biological treatment

Changing biologics

Biologics

Early treatment

Treatment disease modifying drugs

Customised treatment

Other treatment options biologics

Treating AS

Treating PsA
