Objective
The objective is to compare the clinical and laboratory characteristics of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) patients with and without lupus enteritis (LE) and to identify the factors ...associated with the occurrence of LE.
Methods
We performed a retrospective, case-control study in hospitalized patients with SLE who were admitted to our tertiary hospital between January 2012 and December 2021. Sixteen LE patients (cases) were matched (1:3 ratio) for sex and birth year with 48 non-LE patients (controls). Univariable and multivariable logistic regression analyses were used to identify the variables associated with LE.
Results
Of 2,479 SLE patients who were admitted to our hospital as inpatients, 16 (0.65%) were diagnosed as having LE. All patients, cases and controls, were of Mestizo ethnicity. SLE was diagnosed simultaneously with the first episode of LE in 10 (62.5%) patients. The median time from SLE diagnosis to the first episode of LE was 7 (IQR 0–78) months. LE patients had a shorter median disease duration 7 (0–78) vs 34 (9.5–79) months, and a significantly longer hospital stay (28.3 ± 15.8 vs 6.5 ± 7.9 days, p < 0.001) than non-LE patients. Most LE patients (93.8%) had concomitant lupus nephritis. LE patients had higher SLEDAI-2K scores than those without LE (20.5 ± 9.4 vs 9.8 ± 10.4, p < 0.001). By multivariable analysis, a higher SLEDAI-2K score (OR 1.10, 95% CI 1.02–1.18; p = 0.015) was independently associated with LE occurrence after adjusting for cutaneous involvement, lymphocyte count, serum creatinine, and serum complement C4. Recurrence was observed in two patients (12.5%), both with a bowel wall thickening > 8 mm. The two patients with large intestine-dominant LE developed intestinal pseudo-obstruction. No patient had life-threatening complications (intestinal hemorrhage, infarction, or perforation), and there were no deaths induced directly by LE itself.
Conclusion
In patients of Mestizo ethnicity, LE occurs during the early course of SLE, frequently is one of the presenting manifestations of SLE, and in most cases, it presents with concomitant lupus nephritis. Higher levels of disease activity at diagnosis were independently associated with LE occurrence and when recurrences occur, they do so in the context of severe wall thickness.
Objective
To identify factors associated with active tuberculosis (TB) in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE).
Methods
We performed a retrospective case-control study in two tertiary ...care teaching hospitals in Medellín, Colombia. From January 2007 to December 2017, a total of 268 patients with SLE were included. SLE patients with TB (cases) were matched 1:3 with SLE patients without TB (controls) by disease duration and the date of the hospitalization in which the diagnosis of TB was made (index date of cases) to the nearest available rheumatology hospitalization in the matched controls (± 2 years). Conditional univariable and multivariable logistic regression analyses were performed.
Results
Sixty-seven cases and 201 controls were assessed. Only pulmonary TB occurred in 46.3%, only extrapulmonary TB in 16.4% and disseminated TB in 37.3% of cases. Multivariable logistic regression analysis showed that lymphopenia (OR, 2.91; 95% CI 1.41–6.03;
P
= 0.004), 12-month cumulative glucocorticoid dose ≥ 1830 mg (OR, 2.74; 95% CI 1.26–5.98;
P
= 0.011), and having been treated with ≥ 2 immunosuppressants during the last 12 months (OR, 2.81; 95% CI 1.16–6.82;
P
= 0.022) were associated with TB after adjusting for age, sex, ethnicity, disease duration, disease activity, and comorbidity index. A trend towards an association of kidney transplantation with TB was also found (OR, 3.77; 95% CI 0.99–14.30;
P
= 0.051).
Conclusion
Among SLE patients, cumulative glucocorticoid dose, lymphopenia, and the use of ≥ 2 immunosuppressants during the last 12 months were associated with active TB infection.
Key Points
• Among SLE patients, a cumulative dose of glucocorticoids equivalent to 5 mg/day of prednisone during the last 12 months is independently associated with the development of TB.
• The use of two or more immunosuppressants during the last 12 months is also a risk factor for TB infection development is SLE patients.
• Lymphopenia is predominant in SLE patients with TB, being especially profound in those with disseminated TB.
• Renal transplant recipients with SLE also have an elevated risk of TB.
The aims of this study were to describe clinical and laboratory manifestations of patients with levamisole-adulterated cocaine-induced vasculitis/vasculopathy and to propose a skin classification ...according to the distribution and severity of lesions.
We report the characteristics of 30 patients admitted with levamisole-adulterated cocaine-induced vasculitis/vasculopathy in 4 high-complexity institutions in Colombia, from December 2010 to May 2017. We compare our findings with the main published series.
Median age was 31 years (interquartile range, 27-38 years) with a male-to-female ratio of 5:1. Eighty-three percent of the patients had retiform purpura affecting the limbs, buttocks, face, or abdomen; 73% had ear necrosis, 50% cutaneous ulcers, 17% genital necrosis, 13% oral ulcers, and 10% digital necrosis. Cutaneous involvement was classified according to the frequency of the compromised corporal area, and purpuric lesions were stratified in 4 grades of severity. Anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies were positive in 85% of the cases, lupus anticoagulant in 73%, and antinuclear autoantibodies in 57%; rheumatoid factor was negative in all cases. We found nephritis in 17 cases (57%). Prednisolone was used in most of the patients (70%), with other immunosuppressive agents being used in a lower percentage. Improvement was observed in 93% of the patients, but symptoms recurred in 40%, attributed to relapses in consumption. End-stage chronic renal disease developed in 10% of the cases, and 1 patient died.
Because of rising cocaine consumption and levamisole adulteration frequency, levamisole-adulterated cocaine-induced vasculitis/vasculopathy is becoming more common. Detailed characterization of skin involvement coupled with multiple antibody positivity is essential for a diagnosis. Renal involvement is frequent, clinically and histologically heterogeneous, and potentially serious.
Among myositis-specific antibodies, anti-melanoma differentiation-associated gene 5 (anti-MDA5) is one of the antibodies with a unique spectrum that is expressed principally in clinically amyopathic ...dermatomyositis (CADM) and, to a lesser extent, in dermatomyositis (DM). In addition to muscle and classical skin involvement, patients with anti-MDA5 DM/CADM are characterized by the expression of rapidly progressive interstitial lung diseases, vasculopathic lesions, and non-erosive arthritis. Although cardiac involvement has been described in other inflammatory myopathies, such as myocarditis, pericarditis, and conduction disorders, in anti-MDA5 DM/CADM patients, heart disease is infrequent. We report a case of a young male presenting with constitutional symptoms, polyarthritis, skin ulcers, and mild muscle weakness who developed an episode of high ventricular rate atrial fibrillation during his hospitalization. The anti-MDA5 DM diagnosis was supported by increased muscular enzymes, positive anti-MDA5 and anti-Ro52 antibodies, and the presence of organizing pneumonia. He was treated with high-dose glucocorticoids, rituximab, and beta-blocker drugs and received pharmacological cardioversion, which improved his myopathy symptoms and stabilized his heart rhythm. Here, we describe eight similar cases of anti-MDA5 DM/CADM with cardiac involvement. The case presented and the literature reviewed reveal that although rare, physicians must be aware of cardiac disease in patients with suggestive symptoms to guarantee early assessment and treatment, thereby reducing life-treating consequences.
Objetivo: describir las principales características demográficas y clínicas de los pacientes pediátricos con poliarteritis nodosa (PAN).
Metodología: estudio descriptivo retrospectivo.
Resultados: se ...obtuvieron las historias clínicas de menores de 18 años con diagnóstico de vasculitis o PAN atendidos entre el 2010 y 2019 en dos hospitales de Medellín. Se incluyeron 19 pacientes, 11 clasificados como PAN cutánea (PANC) según la definición de la Liga Europea contra el Reumatismo y la Sociedad Europea de Reumatología Pediátrica, y 8 como PAN sistémica (PANS) acorde con los criterios de Ankara 2008. El 57,9 % fueron varones (n = 11). La mediana de la edad en el diagnóstico fue 10 años (3-17 años) y del tiempo de seguimiento: 15 meses (0-105 meses). Las manifestaciones más frecuentes fueron nódulos subcutáneos (84,2 %), fiebre (57,9 %), artralgias (57,9 %) y dolor en las pantorrillas (52,6 %). Los pacientes con PANS presentaron más pérdida de peso y hemoglobina baja. 5 niños cursaron con úlceras (26,3 %) cuatro con PANC; 2 exhibieron necrosis lingual (10,5 %) y 2 necrosis digital (10,5 %), todos con PANC. El promedio de la PCR fue de 10,2 mg/dl (0,33-45,3) y, de la eritrosedimentación: 74 mm/hora (15-127 mm/hora). En las imágenes hubo un realce meníngeo, aneurismas intrahepáticas y mesentéricos, entre otros hallazgos. Todos recibieron esteroides sistémicos. Ninguno falleció.
Conclusión: en esta serie, la PAN pediátrica fue más común en niños de edad escolar. La PANC fue más frecuente que la PANS. Las manifestaciones más descritas fueron los nódulos subcutáneos, las mialgias, la fiebre, las artralgias y el dolor en las pantorrillas. Aunque se ha considerado la PANC como una enfermedad benigna, estos pacientes pueden requerir tratamiento con glucocorticoides e inmunosupresores.
Objective: To describe the main demographic and clinical characteristics of patients who were diagnosed with childhood polyarteritis nodosa (PAN). Methods: A descriptive study was conducted using ...retrospective data. Results: The clinical registries from patients under 18th years with vasculitis or PAN diagnosis attended between 2010 and 2019 in two Medical Centers from Medellín were obtained. Nineteen patients were included: eleven classified as cutaneous PAN (PANC) accor-ding to the definition of the European League Against Rheumatism and the European Society of Pediatric Rheumatology and eight as systemic PAN according to Ankara 2008 Criteria. 57.9% were male. The median age at diagnosis was ten years (3-17), and the median follow-up period was 15 months (0-105). The most common clinical characteristics were subcutaneous nodules (84.2%), fever (57.9%), arthralgias (57.9%), and calf pain (52.6%). SPAN patients had more frequent weight loss and lower hemoglobin. Five patients had ulcers (26.3%), four of them with CPAN; two patients had lingual necrosis (10.5%), and two digital necrosis (10.5%), all of them also with CPAN. CRP mean was 10.2 mg/dl (0.33-45.3) and mean erythrocyte sedi-mentation rate (ESR) was 74 mm/h (15-127 mm/h). Meningeal enhancing, intrahepatic, and mesenteric aneurism, among others, were reported in diagnostic images. All patients required treatment with systemic glucocorticoid. None of the patients died during the follow-up period. Conclusions: In this pediatric series from Medellín-Colombia, PAN was more common in boys of school age. CPAN was more frequent than SPAN. The clinical characteristics most reported were subcutaneous no-dules, myalgias, arthralgias, and calf pain. Although CPAN has been considered a benign disease, these patients may require systemic glucocorticoid and immunosuppressive therapy.