Examples
| Generic Name | Brand Name |
|---|
| chloroquine hydrochloride | Aralen |
| hydroxychloroquine sulfate | Plaquenil |
Antimalarial medications are used to treat malaria and are
also prescribed for
lupus (systemic lupus erythematosus, or SLE) and
rheumatoid arthritis.
How It Works
These medications reduce
inflammation. (While they are also used to prevent or
treat malaria, there is no known relationship between lupus and
malaria.)
Why It Is Used
These medications are used to
control skin rash in people who have lupus. They also may help relieve muscle
and joint pain, fatigue, and fever that are not controlled with nonsteroidal
anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs).
These medications
may be used together with anti-inflammatory drugs or
corticosteroids. Using them may allow you to reduce
the dose of steroids to a level that causes fewer or less bothersome side
effects.
How Well It Works
Antimalarial medication is used
with corticosteroid creams to control lupus skin rash, and it has long been
used to control lupus-related joint pain.1 For skin
rash, this treatment works best when it is combined with protecting the skin
from the sun.
Hydroxychloroquine may protect against lupus
disease flares.1
Side Effects
Most people experience no major side
effects from antimalarial drugs. Infrequent side effects include:
- Dizziness.
- Rash and
itching.
- Nausea.
- Vomiting.
- Diarrhea.
- Abdominal
cramps.
A very rare side effect is damage to the
retina of the eye. Before taking an antimalarial, you
will have an eye exam by an
ophthalmologist. Eye damage can be caught early by
self-testing your vision every month or by seeing an ophthalmologist every
year. If you have any change in vision, contact your ophthalmologist or
rheumatologist immediately.
See Drug Reference for a full list of
side effects. (Drug Reference is not available in all systems.)
What To Think About
It may take several months for
these medications to work. If antimalarial treatment doesn't seem to be helping
within 6 months, your doctor will probably recommend that you stop taking
it.
An initial eye examination will usually be done before you
start taking hydroxychloroquine (Plaquenil) or chloroquine (Aralen). After the
initial eye examination, your doctor may require eye exams every 6 to 12
months. Your doctor may also ask you to check your eyesight regularly with an
eye test at home (as with an
Amsler
grid
). If there is a change in your eyesight, your doctor may reduce
your dose or recommend that you stop taking the medication to prevent permanent
eye damage. If antimalarial medication is effective, the dose may be tapered or
taken less often to reduce the risk of permanent eye damage.
The
dose of antimalarial medication may be adjusted if you have kidney or liver
disease.
Talk to your doctor about this medication if you are
pregnant or are considering pregnancy and have lupus.
Complete the
new medication information form (PDF)
(What is a PDF document?)
to help you understand this medication.