Although cyclophosphamide and prednisolone are effective in treating systemic vasculitis, the optimum treatment regimes and duration of treatment are unknown. We randomized 54 patients aged 15-70 years (median 57.5 years) with systemic vasculitis (classical polyarteritis n = 8, microscopic polyarteritis n = 17, Wegener's granulomatosis n = 29) to treatment with either pulse cyclophosphamide and prednisolone (PCYP) (n = 24) or continuous oral and prednisolone and cyclophosphamide, with the latter followed after a median of 3 months (range 1.5-10 months) by azathioprine (CCAZP) (n = 30). Patients on CCAZP were more likely to develop leucopenia (13/30) than patients on PCYP, (7/24) although the difference was not significant. The numbers of infective episodes during follow up were comparable in the two groups at 1.7/patient for PCYP and 1.66/patient for CCAZP. Overall, 26/30 patients (87%) treated with CCAZP developed treatment-related toxicity, as did 17/24 patients (71%) treated with PCYP. After a median follow-up of 40.4 months (range 0.7-64.8), there was no difference in the frequency of deaths (PCYP 5, CCAZP 4), relapses (PCCYP 7, CCAZP 8), treatment failures (PCYP 4, CCAZP 4), improvement in disease activity scores or renal function. Survival at three years was 77% in patients treated with PCYP, and 90% in patients on CCAZP (p = 0.38). There was a tendency towards increased toxicity in patients treated with the continuous regimen.
Membranous nephropathy complicated by a vasculitic glomerulonephritis: (1) has a more aggressive clinical course than membranous nephropathy alone, (2) appears to have an association with ANCA, (3) should be considered in those patients with an accelerated decline in renal function, and (4) may respond to treatment with immunosuppressive drugs.
Because death after acute systemic vasculitis is now uncommon, alternative measures of outcome are required. A significant component of patient morbidity is disease-related damage, which can be quantified by the Vasculitis Damage Index (64 items in 11 organ-based systems). We investigated serially the time-course of damage in 120 patients with systemic vasculitis, to determine the earliest indicators of outcome. High damage scores at 2 years after presentation were characteristic of fatal disease (OR 8.1-12.4). Significant damage occurred within 6 months of presentation, and was a feature of fatal disease. More damage occurred after presentation than after relapse. Lung and multi-system damage were early indicators of poor outcome in severe non-fatal disease. Damage occurs early in systemic vasculitis, and is an indicator of poor outcome. This novel observation, together with evidence of persistent subclinical disease activity and the high frequency of relapse, suggests a need for new treatment strategies. Analogy with the management of acute leukaemia suggests a strategy of early diagnosis and intensive induction of remission, with early escalation of treatment for resistant disease.
We report ten patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) who developed a focal segmental necrotizing glomerulonephritis (FSNGN) and extracapillary proliferation typical of vasculitic glomerulonephritis. Five patients also had extrarenal vasculitis. Renal presentation was with renal impairment (n = 9) (median creatinine 726 mumol/l, range 230-1592 mumol/l), microscopic haematuria (n = 8) and proteinuria (n = 10). Nine patients were seropositive for rheumatoid factor and nine had bone erosions. Serum from four of five patients tested by indirect immunofluorescence was positive for antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA) with perinuclear staining. Only three patients had penicillamine or gold therapy. Treatment was with prednisolone and cyclophosphamide (six patients, two of whom were also plasma-exchanged), prednisolone and azathioprine (two patients) and prednisolone alone (two patients). There was a marked improvement in renal function in eight patients. Two patients with dialysis-dependent renal failure recovered renal function, although in one patient this was transient and she required further dialysis 4 months later. Two other patients progressed to dialysis at 3 months and 1 year respectively. Four patients died, one remains dialysis-dependent, and four continue to have good renal function at 5 year follow-up (median creatinine 148.5 mumol/l, range 120-193 mumol/l). One patient was lost to follow-up at 5 years. FSNGN should be considered in all patients with RA and renal impairment, proteinuria and/or microscopic haematuria. This diagnosis appears to be more likely in patients with clinical extrarenal vasculitis, bone erosions or who are seropositive. In these cases, an urgent renal biopsy is indicated.
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