Background
Pulmonary artery involvement (PAI) in Takayasu arteritis (TAK) can lead to severe complications, but the relationship between the two has not been fully clarified.
Methods
We retrospectively investigated 166 consecutive patients with TAK who attended Kyoto University Hospital from 1997 to 2018. The demographic data, clinical symptoms and signs, comorbidities, treatments, and imaging findings were compared between patients with and without PAI. TAK was diagnosed based on the American College of Rheumatology Classification Criteria (1990) or the Japanese Clinical Diagnostic Criteria (2008). PAI was identified using enhanced computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, or lung scintigraphy.
Results
PAI was detected in 14.6% (n = 24) of total TAK patients. Dyspnea (25.0% vs. 8.6%; p = 0.043), pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) (16.7% vs. 0.0%; p < 0.001), ischemic heart disease (IHD) (29% vs. 9.3%; p = 0.018), respiratory infection (25.0% vs. 6.0%; p = 0.009), and nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) infection (20.8% vs. 0.8%; p < 0.001) were significantly more frequent, and renal artery stenosis (0% vs. 17%; p = 0.007) was significantly less frequent in TAK patients with PAI than in those without PAI. PAI and biologics were risk factors for NTM.
Conclusions
TAK patients with PAI more frequently have dyspnea, PAH, IHD, and respiratory infection, including NTM, than TAK patients without PAI.
Recent large observational studies of antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibody-associated vasculitis (AAV) show that severe infection is a major cause of death and that the majority of infections occur during the early phase of initiating remission-induction therapy. Many risk factors for severe infection have been suggested, but these have been inconsistent. Nevertheless, infectious risk factors in elderly patients with AAV have not been adequately investigated in previous studies.
In this retrospective observational study, we examined potential predictors of severe infection within 90 days (early severe infections) after remission-induction therapy in patients with AAV aged 65 years or older. We included 167 consecutive elderly patients with AAV admitted to our hospital. Data from medical history and remission-induction therapy were analyzed for predictive risk factors associated with early severe infections. The relationship between initial doses of corticosteroids and cumulative incidence of severe infections was also analyzed. A multivariate analysis of risk factors for early severe infections was performed using logistic regression analysis. The Kaplan–Meier method was used to estimate the overall survival, and the log-rank test was used to evaluate the differences between patients with and without early severe infections. Gray method was used to compare the cumulative incidence of severe infections in patients who did and did not receive initial high-dose corticosteroids.
Logistic regression analysis showed that initial high-dose corticosteroid administration (prednisolone ≥0.8 mg/kg/d) (odds ratio [OR] 3.86, P = .030) and serum creatinine levels at diagnosis ≥1.5 mg/dL (OR 5.13, P
= .003) were independent predictors of early severe infection although administration of cyclophosphamide or rituximab was not. The cumulative incidence of severe infections was also significantly higher in patients who received initial high-dose corticosteroids (P = .042), and patients with early severe infections exhibited a high mortality rate within 6 months (P < .001).
Our findings suggest that initial high-dose corticosteroids and renal impairment at diagnosis are associated with a higher risk of early severe infections and early death in elderly patients with AAV.
We aimed to investigate the efficacy of plasma exchange on severe anti‐neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody‐associated vasculitis (AAV). Of 182 patients with AAV in our hospital, 12 patients with life‐threatening organ damage (rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis and/or diffuse alveolar hemorrhage) underwent centrifuge‐based therapeutic plasma exchange and immunosuppressive therapy. Twenty‐four patients matched for age, serum creatinine, and severity of vasculitis, who received high‐dose glucocorticoids with or without immunosuppressants, were included in the nonplasma exchange group. Renal survival rate at 2 years from induction treatment was not significantly different between the plasma and nonplasma exchange groups (P = 0.524). Mortality rate at 5 years from induction treatment was not significantly different between the plasma and nonplasma exchange groups (P = 0.631). In this retrospective study, we could not show the significant differences in the renal survival rate and survival rate between the two groups.
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