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Factors associated with poor outcomes in patients with lupus nephritis

Authors :
A. Hurtado
Carlos Leon
B. Leclerq
C. De La Cuesta
C. Cely
F. Pachon
L. Garcia Mayol
E. Tozman
G. Barreto
A. Cepero
M. Esquenazi
Alfredo Valdés Paredes
J. C. Busse
A. Esquenazi
E. Borja
T. Khan
Gabriel Contreras
M. Almeida Suarez
N. Nahar
K. Iqbal
F. Ramirez-Seijas
Victoriano Pardo
H. Garcia Estrada
Arif Asif
D. Hoffman
Ivonne Hernandez Schulman
Oliver Lenz
Source :
Lupus. 14:890-895
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2005.

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

Details

ISSN :
14770962 and 09612033
Volume :
14
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Lupus
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....40e5c9d9cfb347397f2884a906f2382a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1191/0961203305lu2238oa