Renal effects of aspirin and low dose methotrexate in rheumatoid arthritis.

1993 
OBJECTIVES--The aim of this investigation was to study the glomerular and tubular effects of low doses (15 mg) of methotrexate in patients with rheumatoid arthritis with and without combined treatment with aspirin (2 g single dose). METHODS--Renal function was measured by the plasma clearance of EDTA labelled with chromium-51 (51Cr-EDTA) and mercaptoacetyltriglycine labelled with technetium-99m (99mTc-MAG-3). RESULTS--Clearance of 51Cr-EDTA was reduced from 98 (6) to 87 (5) ml/min (mean (SEM)) for patients receiving methotrexate only and further reduced to 76 (5) ml/min for patients receiving methotrexate and aspirin. This effect was reversible as 51Cr-EDTA increased to 85 (6) ml/min during continued treatment with methotrexate alone. Clearance of 99mTc-MAG-3 also decreased from 366 (18) to 315 (17) ml/min in patients receiving methotrexate alone and further to 295 (17) ml/min during treatment with aspirin and methotrexate. Continued treatment with methotrexate alone resulted in a further decrease in the 99mTc-MAG-3 clearance to 253 (17) ml/min. CONCLUSIONS--The study shows that treatment with low doses of methotrexate particularly when combined with aspirin affects glomerular and tubular function. These effects may be of clinical importance and renal function should therefore be monitored with more sensitive methods than serum creatinine as this may not reflect these changes.
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