A randomized study comparing methylprednisolone plus chlorambucil versus methylprednisolone plus cyclophosphamide in idiopathic membranous nephropathy.Claudio Ponticelli, Paolo Altieri, Francesco Scolari et al.|Journal of the American Society of Nephrology|1998 To assess whether chlorambucil or cyclophosphamide may have a better therapeutic index in patients with idiopathic membranous nephropathy, we compared two regimens based on a 6-mo treatment, alternating every other month methylprednisolone with chlorambucil or methylprednisolone with cyclophosphamide. Patients with biopsy-proven membranous nephropathy and with a nephrotic syndrome were randomized to be given methylprednisolone (1 g intravenously for 3 consecutive days followed by oral methylprednisolone, 0.4 mg/kg per d for 27 d) alternated every other month either with chlorambucil (0.2 mg/kg per d for 30 d) or cyclophosphamide (2.5 mg/kg per d for 30 d). The whole treatment lasted 6 mo; 3 mo with corticosteroids and 3 mo with one cytotoxic drug. Among 87 patients followed for at least 1 yr, 36 of 44 (82%; 95% confidence interval [CI], 67.3 to 91.8%) assigned to methylprednisolone and chlorambucil entered complete or partial remission of the nephrotic syndrome, versus 40 of 43 (93%; 95% CI, 80.9 to 98.5%) assigned to methylprednisolone and cyclophosphamide (P = 0.116). Of patients who attained remission of the nephrotic syndrome, 11 of 36 in the chlorambucil group (30.5%) and 10 of 40 in the cyclophosphamide group (25%) had a relapse of the nephrotic syndrome between 6 and 30 mo. The reciprocal of plasma creatinine improved in the cohort groups followed for 1 yr for both treatment groups (P < 0.01) and remained unchanged when compared with basal values in the cohort groups followed for 2 and 3 yr. Six patients in the chlorambucil group and two in the cyclophosphamide group did not complete the treatment because of side effects. Four patients in the chlorambucil group but none in the cyclophosphamide group suffered from herpes zoster. One patient per group developed cancer. It is concluded that in nephrotic patients with idiopathic membranous nephropathy both treatments may be effective in favoring remission and in preserving renal function for at least 3 yr.
Clinical Review of 247 Case Records of Spitz Nevus (Epithelioid Cell and/or Spindle Cell Nevus)BACKGROUND: Spitz nevus has clinically been described as a dome-shaped usually nonpigmented papular or nodular lesion variable in color from pink to red. OBJECTIVES: To give an exhaustive description of the clinical features of the Spitz nevus from a large series of 247 patients. METHODS: A retrospective analysis of the clinical features of 247 Spitz nevi excised from 1974 to 1993 has been performed. We evaluated the following features: age, sex, anatomical location, clinical and histopathologic features; descriptive statistics were calculated and relationships among the above variables were assessed. RESULTS: Most lesions were pigmented (71.7%), located on the lower extremities (43.3%), more frequent in the first decade (55.8%) and in females (57.9%). The nonpigmented type was more frequent in the head or neck region, whereas the pigmented types were more frequent on the lower extremities. Besides, these types showed different histopathologic features: the spindle cells usually predominated in the flat pigmented type, whereas dome-shaped types were usually composed of both spindle and epithelioid cells. CONCLUSIONS: In our patients, the pigmented Spitz nevi were more common than the nonpigmented ones; furthermore pigmented and nonpigmented Spitz nevi showed different anatomical locations and different histopathologic features.
A multicenter study on insulin-like growth factor-I serum levels in children with chronic inflammatory diseases.OBJECTIVE: To study insulin-like factor-I (IGF-I) levels in children and adolescents with connective tissue diseases (CTDs), compare them with values obtained in normal controls, and correlate them with age, sex, steroid treatment, and inflammatory parameters. METHODS: A multicenter, cross-sectional study was performed in 3 Italian pediatric rheumatology centers. The subjects studied comprised 117 patients with juvenile arthritis (53 systemic, 25 pauciarticular and 17 polyarticular) and other CTDs (22), and 78 children without inflammatory conditions. IGF-I levels were measured by radioimmunoassay after acid-ethanol extraction. RESULTS: Mean IGF-I serum levels were 167.6 ng/ml (+/- 132.5) in patients and 214.4 (+/- 142.8) in controls. A significant correlation was found between IGF-I levels and age in the controls (P = 0.001), but not in the patients. Covariance analysis with age as the covariate showed significantly lower IGF-I levels in the patient group (P = 0.001). No significant correlation was found between IGF-I levels and the total quantity of steroid taken. Multiple regression analysis showed that IGF-I levels were inversely correlated with the ESR (P = 0.0001) and positively correlated with age (P = 0.0002) and sex (P = 0.021) in the patient group. CONCLUSION: IGF-I serum levels are decreased in patients with CTDs; inflammation could play a major role.
Prognostic factors of long-term allograft survival in 632 CyA-treated recipients of a primary renal transplantG. Montagnino, Antonio Tarantino, B. Cesana et al.|Transplant International|1997 Abstract. A total of 632 cyclosporin (CyA)-treated primary renal allograft recipients with a functioning graft at 6 months were retrospectively evaluated for risk factors correlated with long-term allograft function. Mean follow-up after the 6th month was 68.4 ± 40.6 months. One hundred twenty-one of these patients (19 %) were lost: 29 died (23/29 with a functioning graft), 77 of the remaining 92 (83 %) lost their graft because of chronic allograft dysfunction, 9 due to recurrence of glomerulonephritis, 5 due to renal artery thrombosis, and 1 due to chronic CyA toxicity. At univariate analysis, factors correlated with a better renal (R) and pure renal (PR) allograft survival were: dialysis duration of less than 5 years, fewer than 2 rejections within the 6th post-Tx month, immediate graft function recovery, plasma creatinine below 1.5 mg/dl at the 6th month, age at Tx above 15 years, and receiving a living donor graft. Cox's regression analysis was also performed to obtain relative risks for the same parameters. Long-term dialysis patients had more frequent late recoveries (P - 0.002) and reductions in therapy (P = 0.01) in order to reduce the side effects of steroids. In young patients receiving an initial oral CyA dose of 17 mg/kg per day, steroids were stopped at the 6th month in order to achieve catch-up growth: only one such patient lost his graft. In contrast, 72 % of the young patients who lost their grafts received an initial oral CyA dosage of 13 mg/ kg per day. Thus, young patients did worse not because of steroid withdrawal, but because of inadequate initial CyA dosage. These results suggest that although we cannot exclude alloantigen-independent mechanisms as factors that stimulate progression of chronic allograft dysfunction, it would appear that the initial lesions are induced by events mostly mediated by immunological mechanisms.
Calibration of Local Systems with Lyophilized Calibrant Plasmas Improves the Interlaboratory Variability of the INR in the Italian External Quality Assessment SchemeCalibration with lyophilized calibrant plasmas certified in terms of PT with International Reference Preparations for thromboplastin has been proposed to minimize the effect of coagulometers on the INR. Aim of this study was to test the ability of local calibration with lyophilized calibrant plasmas, combined with a modified statistical approach, to improve the interlaboratory variability of the INR measured on two test plasmas (one coumarin and one artificially-depleted) by participants in the External Quality Assessment Scheme (EQAS). Sets of lyophilized calibrant and test plasmas were sent to the participants in the EQAS, who were asked to determine PT with their own reagent/ instrument combination (local system). Results were returned as PT together with information on the type of local system, the stated International Sensitivity Index (ISI) and the geometric mean of PTs determined by testing with the local system fresh plasmas from 20 healthy subjects. Ninety-two participants using 9 and 11 brands of reagents and instruments returned results. The CV of the INR determined with the stated ISI for the coumarin (Mean INR = 4.39) and artificially-depleted (Mean INR = 4.23) test plasmas were 11.2% and 10.3% and were reduced on the average by 34% and 54%, respectively, when the INR was calculated with the local ISI. In conclusions, results from this field study involving laboratories and testing systems representative of the real situation in oral anticoagulant monitoring in our country, indicate that local calibration by artificially-depleted plasmas, combined with the proposed statistical approach, is suitable to improve the interlaboratory agreement on the INR.