AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined how renal complications impact the effectiveness and safety of tacrolimus combination therapy in SLE patients during maintenance treatment.
  • Fifty-seven SLE patients participated, with some having renal complications and others without, and key measures included disease activity, steroid use, and kidney function before and after one year of treatment.
  • Results showed significant improvements in disease activity and serum C3 levels for both groups, alongside reduced proteinuria, indicating tacrolimus therapy is beneficial even for patients with renal complications.

Article Abstract

Objectives: The study investigated whether renal complications affected the efficacy and safety of tacrolimus combination therapy in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) during a maintenance phase.

Methods: Fifty-seven patients with SLE (A: 30 cases with renal complication, B: 27 cases without renal complications) were included. The presence of renal complications was defined as proteinuria ≥0.5 g/day and lupus nephritis on renal biopsy. Major outcome measures included SLE disease activity index (SLEDAI), steroid dose, serum anti-dsDNA Ab, C3 and creatinine (Cr) levels and estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR). The patient's background factors included age, gender, disease duration and ACE-I/angiotensin II receptor blocker and statin therapies. We compared these outcome measures pre treatment and after 1 year of treatment.

Results: The SLEDAI and serum C3 levels improved in both groups from pretreatment period to post-treatment period: from 7.2±5.0 to 2.8±2.3 in A and 6.4±3.8 to 2.4±2.2 in B, p<0.001, and from 65.9±24.6 to 77.7±18.2 mg/dL in A and 81.8±23.0 to 90.6±19.4 mg/dL in B, p=0.002, respectively. The anti-dsDNA antibody level was reduced, and the serum Cr and eGFR levels were slightly elevated. No patients developed end-stage renal failure that required artificial dialysis.

Conclusions: Tacrolimus combination therapy had additive beneficial effects on reduced proteinuria and increased serum C3 levels in patients with SLE with renal complications during a maintenance phase.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4453506PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/lupus-2015-000091DOI Listing

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