Abstract

A variety of gastrointestinal adverse drug reactions are seen in nearly all conventional antirheumatic medications, ranging from nausea to life-threatening drug-induced liver injury. Rheumatologists should be particularly familiar with hepatotoxicity associated with long-term methotrexate use, and the range of unique hepatic, biliary, and pancreatic manifestations associated with azathioprine. Hepatitis B virus reactivation is the most serious gastrointestinal disease risk associated with many biological therapies, particularly rituximab. Gastrointestinal perforation may be a specific concern for agents directed at interleukin-6 pathways, and some reports have raised the question of whether interleukin-17 inhibition may elevate inflammatory bowel disease risk.

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