Factors associated with poor outcomes in patients with lupus nephritis

Gabriel Contreras(University of Miami), Victoriano Pardo(University of Miami), Cesar Cely(Veterans Health Administration), Ezana Sandrina Almada Fernandes de Borja(University of Miami), Abdías Hurtado(University of Miami), Carolina De La Cuesta(University of Miami), Khurshid Iqbal(University of Miami), Oliver Lenz(University of Miami), Arif Asif(University of Miami), Nilay Nahar(University of Miami), B Leclerq(University of Miami), Christelle Léon(University of Miami), Ivonne Hernandez Schulman(University of Miami), F Ramirez-Seijas(University of Miami), A Paredes(University of Miami), A. Cepero(University of Miami), Taqi F. Toufeeq Khan(University of Miami), Felipe Pachon(University of Miami), Elaine Tozman(University of Miami), Savio George Barreto(University of Miami), David I. Hoffman(University of Miami), Michelle A. Suarez(University of Miami), Jorge C. Busse(University of Miami), M Esquenazi(University of Miami), and Yoshua Esquenazi(University of Miami), L Garcia Mayol(University of Miami), H Garcia Estrada(University of Miami)
Lupus
November 1, 2005
Cited by 219

Abstract

The objective of this study was to identify the factors associated with important clinical outcomes in a case-control study of 213 patients with lupus nephritis. Included were 47% Hispanics, 44% African Americans and 9% Caucasians with a mean age of 28 years. Fifty-four (25%) patients reached the primary composite outcome of doubling serum creatinine, end-stage renal disease or death during a mean follow-up of 37 months. Thirty-four percent African Americans, 20% Hispanics and 10% Caucasians reached the primary composite outcome (P < 0.05). Patients reaching the composite outcome had predominantly proliferative lupus nephritis (WHO classes: 30% III, 32% IV, 18% V and 5% II, P < 0.025) with higher activity index score (7 +/- 6 versus 5 +/- 5, P < 0.05), chronicity index (CI) score (4 +/- 3 versus 2 +/- 2 unit, P < 0.025), higher baseline mean arterial pressure (MAP) (111 +/- 21 versus 102 +/- 14 mmHg, P < 0.025) and serum creatinine (1.9 +/- 1.3 versus 1.3 +/- 1.0 mg/dL, P < 0.025), but lower baseline hematocrit (29 +/- 6 versus 31 + 5%, P < 0.025) and complement C3 (54 +/- 26 versus 65 + 33 mg/dL, P < 0.025) compared to controls. More patients reaching the composite outcome had nephrotic range proteinuria compared to controls (74% versus 56%, P < 0.025). By multivariate analysis, CI (hazard ratio [95% CI] 1.18 [1.07-1.30] per point), MAP (HR 1.02 [1.00-1.03] per mmHg), and baseline serum creatinine (HR 1.26 [1.04-1.54] per mg/dL) were independently associated with the composite outcome. We concluded that hypertension and elevated serum creatinine at the time of the kidney biopsy as well as a high CI are associated with an increased the risk for chronic renal failure or death in patients with lupus nephritis.


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