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Query: UMLS:C0024141 (
systemic lupus erythematosus
)
44,322
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In the first phase of this study, a data-base containing clinical and laboratory findings of 704 patients with
systemic lupus erythematosus
(
SLE
), originating from 29 centres and 14 countries, was used to assess the validity of 4 common indices of disease activity,
SLAM
, BILAG, SLEDAI and SIS. The physician's judgement of activity was assumed as the unique reference criterion (gold standard). Computer programmes were developed to calculate automatically the 4 activity indices; this computation appeared to correspond with manual computations in a sample of 60 appropriately selected cases. All 4 indices were closely correlated with each other (r in the range of 0.716 to 0.872), and with the physician's score (r in the range of 0.620 to 0.719). In the second phase of the study the activity index developed in part I (ECLAM) was prospectively validated, and its performance compared to that of the other scales, both as a single state index and as a transition index (i.e., its ability to assess disease activity at a single point in time and to detect variations in consecutive readings). A computer-assisted clinical chart was prepared for this purpose. This chart allowed us to calculate automatically all the indices. Two consecutive observation times (time 0, and time 1 three months later) were included in the study protocol. Data on 75 patients from 19 centres were collected, and each patient was observed twice. All the computed indices were closely correlated, both at time 0 (r ranging from 0.725 to 0.884), and at time 1 (r ranging from 0.607 to 0.833).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Disease activity in systemic lupus erythematosus: report of the Consensus Study Group of the European Workshop for Rheumatology Research. III. Development of a computerised clinical chart and its application to the comparison of different indices of disease activity. The European Consensus Study Group for Disease Activity in SLE. 145 11
Serum levels of the soluble form of the interleukin-2 receptor (sIL-2R) were measured in the sera of 32 patients with
systemic lupus erythematosus
. A significant correlation was observed between the levels of sIL-2R and the
SLAM
score of disease activity (R:0.40; p: less than 0.05). The correlation was slightly lower than those between the
SLAM
score and the levels of anti-dsDNA or of the complement activity. The levels of sIL-2R were not significantly correlated with those of serum anti-ds-DNA and complement, nor with a sign of peripheral blood B cell hyperactivity, such as the spontaneous in vitro production of anti-DNA antibodies.
...
PMID:Evaluation of serum levels of soluble interleukin-2 receptor as an indicator of disease activity in systemic lupus erythematosus. 158 27
Assessing disease activity in
SLE
is often difficult due to the multiple organ systems involved. Three recent disease activity indices (
SLAM
, BILAG, and SLEDAI) are being increasingly used. Retrospective investigations comparing these indices have not been performed. We compared
SLAM
, BILAG, and SLEDAI in a retrospective study of 52 patients with
SLE
.
SLAM
and BILAG were found to correlate well with one another and with clinicians' evaluations of disease activity (as measured by intensity of immunosuppressive treatment). They correlated less well or insignificantly with laboratory parameters (ESR, anti-ds-DNA-antibodies). If practicability is also considered,
SLAM
, in particular, appears to be suitable for retrospective evaluation of disease activity in
SLE
.
...
PMID:[Comparison of three indices for the evaluation of disease activity in systemic lupus erythematosus]. 179 57
14 female patients (mean age 28 [18-56] years) with severe
systemic lupus erythematosus
(
SLE
) were treated after discontinuing previous immunosuppressive therapy, according to an intensified protocol, with three plasmaphereses (days 1-3), followed by pulse cyclophosphamide (12 mg/kg i.v. each on days 3-5) and then oral immunosuppression (cyclophosphamide 1-5 mg/kg daily, depending on white blood cell count; prednisone equivalent 2.0 decreasing to 0.1 mg/kg, according to response, for 6 months). The aim of "synchronization" of plasmaphereses with subsequent cyclophosphamide pulse-therapy is to damage pathogenic lymphocyte clones during maximal compensatory activation induced by plasmapheresis. In all patients there was rapid improvement from the nephritis, pneumonitis, cytopenia, CNS abnormalities and polyserositis. The
lupus
activity index (
SLAM
) fell clearly, from initially 28.4 (13-37) points to 8.9 (2-13) after 6 months. Treatment was discontinued after this fall in 12 patients. A recurrence was observed in two patients, at 12 and 39 months respectively. Another patient died from liver cirrhosis of unknown aetiology. Nine patients are under observation but without treatment at present, in essential remission after 2 years (5-51 months), with a
SLAM
of 2.8 (0-7) points. "Synchronization" of plasmaphereses with subsequent pulse cyclophosphamide achieved rapid improvement and it resulted, for the first time, repeatedly in long-term treatment-free clinical remissions.
...
PMID:[Intensified therapy of severe lupus erythematosus]. 174 2
It is difficult to measure clinical disease activity in
systemic lupus erythematosus
because many organs can be involved simultaneously and the corresponding symptoms are not easy to quantify. Disease activity is poorly defined and there is no consensus on what disease activity means or how it should be measured. More than 60 systems have been devised but none of them is commonly used because they do not have the 3 characteristics necessary for such a tool: validity, reliability and sensitivity. Three recent systems, BILAG (British Isles
Lupus
Assessment Group), SLEDAI (
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
Disease Activity Index) and
SLAM
(Systemic
Lupus
Activity Measures) are very valid. Comparisons of their reproducibility are in progress; however, more information is needed concerning their sensitivity and the feasibility of making these systems easy to manage for physicians.
...
PMID:[Evaluation of the clinical activity of systemic lupus erythematosus]. 219 48
The multiple manifestations of
systemic lupus erythematosus
recall the ancient Greek monster the Hydra. No one was sure how many heads it had or what they all looked like and severing one head led to the generation of others. Similarly,
lupus
presents with many different 'faces' and there has been a dearth of agreement about disease indices in
SLE
. This problem is discussed and the results of two international workshops examining three systems (BILAG,
SLAM
and SLEDAI) are presented. It is suggested that we may be close to agreeing how many heads the Hydra of
lupus
has and what they look like.
...
PMID:Comparison of lupus activity indices. 224 24
Six systems for defining and evaluating disease activity in patients with
systemic lupus erythematosus
(
SLE
) (the Ropes system, the National Institutes of Health [NIH] system, the New York Hospital for Special Surgery system, the British Isles
Lupus
Assessment Group [BILAG] scale, the University of Toronto
SLE
Disease Activity Index [
SLE
-DAI], and the Systemic
Lupus
Activity Measure [
SLAM
]) were tested on 25
SLE
patients who were selected to represent a range of disease activity. The patients were evaluated independently by 2 physicians on 2 occasions approximately 1 month apart. Differences between patients demonstrated the largest source of variation in scores, accounting for 56-84% of the total variance, depending on the instrument. Differences between physicians (i.e., error) showed the next largest variation, 11-28% of the total variance, and differences between visits made up 5-16% of the total. The BILAG,
SLE
-DAI, and
SLAM
had the best inter-visit and inter-rater reliability. Convergent validity was shown by the strong correlations of scores among the different instruments (r = 0.81-0.97). All instruments correlated highly with the physicians' clinical impression of disease but less well with their evaluation of disease severity. The number of American Rheumatism Association criteria for
SLE
that were met by the patients correlated poorly with the physicians' global evaluation and with the scores of the instruments. The patients' self-reported disease activity scores correlated highly with the physicians' assessments of disease activity (r = 0.85-0.91), and the mean values from self-reports and from physicians' assessments were nearly equal. In contrast, severity scores correlated less well between self-reports and physician assessments (r = 0.49-0.69), and mean self-reported severity values were lower than the means from physicians. The BILAG,
SLE
-DAI, and
SLAM
systems appear to have better psychometric properties than the others for clinical research.
...
PMID:Reliability and validity of six systems for the clinical assessment of disease activity in systemic lupus erythematosus. 277 20
Malondialdehyde (MDA), a peroxidative end-product released during polyunsaturated fatty acid degradation, reacts strongly with lysine residues of cellular proteins. MDA-modified proteins become immunogenic and may elicit specific autoantibody formation. We hypothesized that systemic diseases in which inflammatory events occur, could be an interesting model for studying oxidative stress. A few studies have suggested that MDA-modified proteins may exist in systemic diseases, and that autoantibodies to MDA-modified structures might reflect this oxidative process. Autoantibodies to MDA-modified epitope(s) were therefore assayed in sera of patients with
systemic lupus erythematosus
(
SLE
, n = 29), scleroderma (SCL, n = 11), giant cell arteritis (GCA, n = 11), periarteritis nodosa (PAN, n = 10), rheumatoid arthritis (RA, n = 9), and healthy subjects (HS, n = 32). Significantly increased anti-MDA-modified epitope(s) autoantibodies were found in patients with
SLE
and also in other systemic diseases such as PAN and SCL. Autoantibodies to MDA-modified epitope(s) were predominantly of IgM isotype, with low levels of IgG and no IgA activity. In
SLE
, anti-MDA-modified epitope(s) autoantibody titres correlated strongly with systemic
lupus
activity measure (
SLAM
, r = 0.702, P = 0.0001), anti-nuclear antigen autoantibodies (ANA, r = 0.4, P = 0.029), IgG anti-cardiolipin (r = 0.558, P = 0.03) and the steroid drug regimen (r = 0.52, P = 0.004). Autoantibodies to MDA-modified epitope(s) may reflect oxidative modifications occurring in systemic diseases, and might be useful as clinical markers of
SLE
activity if further investigated.
...
PMID:Autoantibodies to malondialdehyde-modified epitope in connective tissue diseases and vasculitides. 754 46
The treatment of severe lupus nephritis remains problematic. We have analysed retrospectively 17 patients with corticoresistant lupus nephritis treated with pulse cyclophosphamide. Single monthly doses (500 mg/m2) were given by intravenous infusion with a mean of 10.4 infusions per patient (3 to 18). A comparison of parameters at entry and at the end of the treatment revealed an improvement in proteinuria (4.8 vs 1.9 g/24 h; p < 0.013) whereas mean serum creatinine level and
SLAM
(Systemic
Lupus
Activity Measure) remained stable. The results were identical at follow up (mean: 14.5 months). Most of the therapeutic effect was achieved as soon as the 6th pulse. Further treatment was beneficial for four patients only. None of the studied parameters (serum creatinine level, renal biopsy,
SLAM
) was predictive of a response to an extended course of pulse cyclophosphamide. The infusions were definitively stopped in one patient and delayed in two others because of serious adverse effects. The data indicate that, in mean term, monthly intravenous cyclophosphamide was associated with a substantial amelioration of 24 hours urinary protein level. An amelioration of the renal function was however, uncommon.
...
PMID:[Treatment of lupus glomerulonephritis with intravenous cyclophosphamide]. 765 23
Cell surface expression of lysosome-associated membrane proteins (LAMPs) correlates with serum interleukin-8 (IL-8) levels, shorter disease duration, greater functional impairment from disease-related symptoms and soluble IL-2 receptor levels (sIL-2R) in patients with scleroderma. In this study of 46 patients with
systemic lupus erythematosus
(
SLE
), the relationship of serum IL-8 and cell surface LAMP to two clinical measures of disease activity, the SLEDAI and
SLAM
scales, was evaluated. IL-8 levels were determined on serum samples by the immunometric sandwich enzyme immunoassay technique. Cell surface LAMP expression was determined by flow cytometric quantitation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells with monoclonal antibodies directed against two of the major LAMP proteins, lamp1 and lamp2. The clinical disease activity scales correlated significantly with each other, with C3 levels, serum IL-8, C4, dsDNA and sIL-2R. Lamp1 and lamp2 expression correlated with the
SLAM
but not the SLEDAI scale. Serum IL-8 levels were elevated in 49 of 51 samples tested (44 of 46 patients) and had a stronger correlation with disease activity than C4, dsDNA and sIL-2R levels. Significantly higher levels of IL-8 were seen in patients with evidence of renal involvement. Serum IL-8 and cell surface LAMP expression may be useful indicators of disease activity in patients with
SLE
. The possible role of IL-8 in the pathogenesis of
SLE
requires further investigation.
Lupus
1994 Apr
PMID:Correlation of serum interleukin-8 and cell surface lysosome-associated membrane protein expression with clinical disease activity in systemic lupus erythematosus. 792 Jun 21
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