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Association between hypogammaglobulinaemia and severe infections during induction therapy in ANCA-associated vasculitis: from J-CANVAS study

Authors :
Satoshi Omura
Takashi Kida
Hisashi Noma
Atsuhiko Sunaga
Hiroaki Kusuoka
Masatoshi Kadoya
Daiki Nakagomi
Yoshiyuki Abe
Naoho Takizawa
Atsushi Nomura
Yuji Kukida
Naoya Kondo
Yasuhiko Yamano
Takuya Yanagida
Koji Endo
Shintaro Hirata
Kiyoshi Matsui
Tohru Takeuchi
Kunihiro Ichinose
Masaru Kato
Ryo Yanai
Yusuke Matsuo
Yasuhiro Shimojima
Ryo Nishioka
Ryota Okazaki
Tomoaki Takata
Takafumi Ito
Mayuko Moriyama
Ayuko Takatani
Yoshia Miyawaki
Toshiko Ito-Ihara
Nobuyuki Yajima
Takashi Kawaguchi
Wataru Fukuda
Yutaka Kawahito
Source :
Rheumatology.
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2023.

Abstract

Objectives To investigate the association between decreased serum IgG levels caused by remission-induction immunosuppressive therapy of antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody-associated vasculitis (AAV) and the development of severe infections. Methods We conducted a retrospective cohort study of patients with new-onset or severe relapsing AAV enrolled in the J-CANVAS registry, which was established at 24 referral sites in Japan. The minimum serum IgG levels up to 24 weeks and the incidence of severe infection up to 48 weeks after treatment initiation were evaluated. After multiple imputations for all explanatory variables, we performed the multivariate analysis using a Fine–Gray model to assess the association between low IgG (the minimum IgG levels Results Of 657 included patients (microscopic polyangiitis, 392; granulomatosis with polyangiitis, 139; eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis, 126), 111 (16.9%) developed severe infections. The minimum serum IgG levels were measured in 510 patients, of whom 77 (15.1%) had low IgG. After multiple imputations, the confounder-adjusted hazard ratio of low IgG for the incidence of severe infections was 1.75 (95% confidence interval: 1.03–3.00). The RCS revealed a U-shaped association between serum IgG levels and the incidence of severe infection with serum IgG 946 mg/dl as the lowest point. Subgroup analysis showed no obvious heterogeneity between treatment regimens. Conclusion Regardless of treatment regimens, low IgG after remission-induction treatment was associated with the development of severe infections up to 48 weeks after treatment initiation.

Details

ISSN :
14620332 and 14620324
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Rheumatology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c8a7d4cda7a278bca55c3141753cc1c4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/kead138