Defining renal remission in an international cohort of 248 children and adolescents with lupus nephritis

De Mutiis, Chiara ; Wenderfer, Scott E ; Orjuela, Alvaro ; Bagga, Arvind ; Basu, Biswanath ; Sar, Tanmoy ; Aggarwal, Amita ; Jain, Avinash ; Yap, Hui-Kim ; Ito, Shuichi ; Ohnishi, Ai ; Iwata, Naomi ; Kasapcopur, Ozgur ; Laurent, Audrey ; Mastrangelo, Antonio ; Ogura, Masao ; Shima, Yuko ; Rianthavorn, Pornpimol ; Silva, Clovis A ; Trindade, Vitor ; Dormi, Ada ; Tullus, Kjell (2021) Defining renal remission in an international cohort of 248 children and adolescents with lupus nephritis Rheumatology, 61 (6). pp. 2563-2571. ISSN 1462-0324

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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/keab746

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/keab746

Abstract

Objective: We studied the rate of remission of LN in an international cohort of 248 children and adolescents with biopsy-proven LN. Five different definitions from scientific studies and the definitions recommended by the ACR and Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes were used. Methods: Anonymized clinical data in patients with biopsy-proven LN class ≥III (International Society of Nephrology/Royal Pathology Society) diagnosed and treated in the last 10 years in 23 international centres from 10 countries were collected. We compared the rate of patients in complete and partial remission applying the different definitions. Results: The mean age at diagnosis was 11 years and 4 months, and 177 were females. The number of patients in complete and partial remission varied a great deal between the different definitions. At 24 months, between 50% and 78.8% of the patients were in full remission as defined by the different criteria. The number of patients in partial remission was low, between 2.3% and 25%. No difference in achieved remission was found between boys and girls or between children and adolescents (P > 0.05). Patients with East Asian ethnicity reached remission more often than other ethnicities (P = 0.03-0.0008). Patients treated in high-income countries showed a higher percentage of complete remission at 12 and 24 months (P = 0.002-0.000001). Conclusion: The rate of children and adolescents with LN achieving remission varied hugely with the definition used. Our results give important information for long-awaited treatment studies in children and young people.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to British Society for Rheumatology
Keywords:complete remission; juvenile-onset systemic lupus erythematosus; lupus nephritis; partial remission
ID Code:129215
Deposited On:22 Nov 2022 10:59
Last Modified:22 Nov 2022 10:59

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