Objective This study aimed to analyse the phenotype of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) at first presentation and during follow-up in a newly established SLE cohort based at ‘Attikon’ University Hospital. The hospital combines primary, secondary and tertiary care for the region of Western Attica, Greece. Methods This study comprised a mixed prevalent and incident cohort of 555 Caucasian patients diagnosed with SLE according to American College of Rheumatology 1997 criteria and/or the Systemic Lupus Erythematosus International Collaborating Clinics (SLICC) 2012 criteria. Demographic and clinical characteristics, patterns of severity, treatments and SLICC damage index were recorded for each patient at the time of diagnosis and at last evaluation. Results The mean age at lupus diagnosis was 38.3 years (standard deviation = 15.6 years), with a median disease duration at last follow-up of two years (interquartile range 1-11). At initial presentation, the most common ‘classification’ manifestations were arthritis (73.3%), acute cutaneous lupus (65%) and unexplained fever (25%), while among symptoms not included in any criteria set, Raynaud’s phenomenon (33%) was the most common. Kidney and neuropsychiatric involvement as presenting manifestations were present in 10.3% and 11.5% cases, respectively. Irreversible damage accrual was present in 17.8% within six months of disease diagnosis, attributed mainly to thrombotic and neuropsychiatric disease. At last evaluation, 202 (36.4%) patients had developed severe disease, of whom more than half were treated with pulse cyclophosphamide. Conclusion In this cohort of Caucasian patients, lupus nephritis is not as common as in older cohorts, while neuropsychiatric disease is emerging as a major frontier in lupus prevention and care. These data may help to document changes in the natural history and treatment of SLE over time and may have implications for its early recognition and management.
ObjectiveChanges in the care of patients with SLE dictate a re-evaluation of its natural history and risk factors for disease deterioration and damage accrual. We sought to decipher factors predictive of a deterioration in phenotype (‘transition’) in patients initially presenting with non-severe disease.MethodsPatients from the ‘Attikon’ cohort with disease duration ≥1 year were included. Disease at diagnosis was categorised as mild, moderate or severe, based on the British Isles Lupus Assessment Group manifestations and physician judgement. ‘Transition’ in severity was defined as an increase in category of severity at any time from diagnosis to last follow-up. Multivariable logistic regression was performed to identify baseline factors associated with this transition.Results462 patients were followed for a median (IQR) of 36 (120) months. At diagnosis, more than half (56.5%) had a mild phenotype. During disease course, transition to more severe forms was seen in 44.2%, resulting in comparable distribution among severity patterns at last follow-up (mild 28.4%, moderate 33.1%, severe 38.5%). Neuropsychiatric involvement at onset (OR 6.33, 95% CI 1.22 to 32.67), male sex (OR 4.53, 95% CI 1.23 to 16.60) and longer disease duration (OR 1.09 per 1 year, 95% CI 1.04 to 1.14) were independently associated with transition from mild or moderate to severe disease. Patients with disease duration ≥3 years who progressed to more severe disease had more than 20-fold increased risk to accrue irreversible damage.ConclusionAlmost half of patients with initially non-severe disease progress to more severe forms of SLE, especially men and patients with positive anti-double-stranded DNA or neuropsychiatric involvement at onset. These data may have implications for the management of milder forms of lupus.
BackgroundQuality of care is receiving increased attention in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). We developed quality indicators (QIs) for SLE based on the 2019 update of European League Against Rheumatism recommendations.MethodsA total of 44 candidate QIs corresponding to diagnosis, monitoring and treatment, were independently rated for validity and feasibility by 12 experts and analysed by a modified Research and Development Corporation/University of California Los Angeles model. Adherence to the final set of QIs and correlation with disease outcomes (flares, hospitalisations and organ damage) was tested in a cohort of 220 SLE patients with a median monitoring of 2 years (IQR 2–4).ResultsThe panel selected a total of 18 QIs as valid and feasible. On average, SLE patients received 54% (95% CI 52.3% to 56.2%) of recommended care, with adherence ranging from 44.7% (95% CI 40.8% to 48.6%) for diagnosis-related QIs to 84.3% (95% CI 80.6% to 87.5%) for treatment-related QIs. Sustained remission or low disease activity were achieved in 26.8% (95% CI 21.1% to 33.2%). Tapering of prednisone dose to less than 7.5 mg/day was achieved in 93.6% (95% CI 88.2% to 97.0%) while 73.5% (95% CI 66.6% to 79.6%) received the recommended hydroxychloroquine dose. Higher adherence to monitoring-related QIs was associated with reduced risk for a composite adverse outcome (flare, hospitalisation or damage accrual) during the last year of observation (OR 0.97 per 1% adherence rate, 95% CI 0.96 to 0.99).ConclusionWe developed QIs for assessing and improving the care of SLE patients. Initial real-life data suggest face validity, but a variable degree of adherence and a need for further improvement.
Background:The lack of pathognomonic features poses a considerable challenge in SLE diagnosis. The time from symptom onset to diagnosis has been reported to range from two to six years1.Objectives:To document the initial symptoms of the disease and the time lapse until its diagnosis.Methods:We examined 438 patients from the “Attikon” SLE cohort2. For diagnosis, we used the classification criteria (ACR, SLICC, EULAR-ACR) or in few cases clinical diagnosis (n=32, 7.3%). Data were collected using patient interviews, in-person clinical visits and medical charts review. Initial symptoms were recorded and determined chronologically using prespecified forms with a list of typical manifestations (skin, joints, renal, nervous system, pleuropulmonary, cardiovascular, anti-phospholipid syndrome) as well as characteristic disease features (Raynaud’s phenomenon, fatigue, fever, sicca symptoms). Questions also included the time between symptom onset and initial physician visit, the time from first medical consultation until first rheumatologist assessment, the time from rheumatologist assessment to SLE definite diagnosis, the number of physicians seen before SLE diagnosis, the specialty of first physician and of diagnosing physician. Information on demographic and clinical characteristics, disease activity and disease damage, was collected both at enrolment and at last follow-up visit.Results:88.5% of patients were females, mean (±SD) age at diagnosis was 41.9 years ± 15.4 and disease duration was 6.7 ± 7 years. Most common systems involved were joints (94.5%), skin (73.7%), blood (39.2%) and renal (17.5%). At diagnosis, 9.8% of patients were ANA negative. The most common initial symptoms at disease onset were arthritis/arthralgia (74.4%), followed by fatigue (53.1%) and photosensitive rash (50.9%) (Table 1). Among non-criteria features, Raynaud’s phenomenon was reported by 146 patients (33.3%) prior the diagnosis. The median interval between symptoms onset and the SLE diagnosis was 16 months (IQR 5-60). SLE was diagnosed earlier in ANA-positive than -negative patients [median time 14 months (IQR 5-60) vs 36 months (IQR 10.5-84); P=0.1, t-test]. Approximately half of the patients (52.5%) were diagnosed after 12 months from disease onset with only 15.9% diagnosed within 3 months of symptoms presentation. The median lag time between onset of symptoms and the first medical consultation was 2 months (IQR 1-12). Internists were the most common first consultants (27.8%) followed by orthopedists (15.9%), dermatologists (13.6%) and rheumatologists (13.4%). The median interval between the first medical assessment and first rheumatologist evaluation was 3 months (IQR 0-11.5) while the median time from rheumatologist assessment to definite diagnosis was 0 months (IQR 0-4). SLE patients consulted an average of 3 different physicians before the definite diagnosis, which in 95.8% was established by rheumatologists.Conclusion:Approximately 50% of patients were diagnosed with SLE after 12 months from symptom onset with a mean time from symptoms to definite diagnosis almost 4 years. Increasing awareness of internists to SLE and avoidance of strict adherence to ANA as a requirement for diagnosis may improve early diagnosis.Table 1.Initial symptoms prior to diagnosisSymptomsN=438 (%)Duration*(mean months ±SD)Arthralgias326 (74.4)37.5 ±69.4Photosensitive rash223 (50.9)30.6 ±70.2Malar rash168 (38.3)22.6 ±62Alopecia167 (38.1)19.6 ±54.6Ulcers106 (24.2)16.8 ±54.4Fever103 (23.5)9.3 ±43.8Raynaud’s phenomenon146 (33.3)22.3 ±68.5Fatigue233 (53.1)19.7 ±45.7*Mean time from symptom onset to established diagnosisReferences:[1]Nightingale AL, Davidson JE, Molta CT et al. Lupus Science & Medicine 2017; doi:10.1136/lupus-2016-000172.[2]D Nikolopoulos et al. Lupus 2020; doi: 10.1177/0961203320908932.Acknowledgements:This project has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement No 742390)Disclosure of Interests:None declared
Background:Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) can first present with severe or critical disease leading to hospitalization. Prompt recognition of the disease in hospitalized patients may lead to early institution of treatment and improve outcomes. We have recently developed a clinician-friendly algorithm for SLE diagnosis based on classical clinical and serological SLE features [SLE Risk Probability Index (SLERPI)]1.Objectives:To determine the clinical phenotype of SLE patients first diagnosed during hospitalization, the interval between hospitalization and SLE diagnosis and the potential impact of SLERPI on early diagnosis.Methods:Mixed prospective (from June 2020 to January 2021) and retrospective study of SLE patients from “Attikon” cohort (n=820)2. Clinical phenotype was divided into 10 core domains (neuropsychiatric, thrombosis, nephritis, serosal, haematologic, pulmonary, cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, skin-joints, other). Chart review and patient interview was performed to assess the lag time between 1) the onset of symptoms and 2) the hospitalization and the final diagnosis. Demographic and clinical characteristics, SLERPI and SLICC damage index were recorded for each patient at the time of diagnosis. SLE diagnosis was based on at least one of the three existing classification criteria.Results:Out of 820 SLE patients, 202 (24.6%) diagnosed during hospitalization were included. Among them, 185 patients (91.5%) were hospitalized because of a lupus related feature, while in the remaining 17 SLE patients, hospitalization was due to non-lupus related manifestations. The most common lupus-related clinical phenotype leading to hospital admission was neuropsychiatric lupus (n=51, 25.2%) with cerebrovascular events constituting the dominant clinical syndrome (n=8/51). Thrombotic events (n=32, 15.8%), mainly pulmonary embolism (n=20/32), cytopenias (n=32, 15.8%), lupus nephritis (n=30, 14.8%), skin-joint disease (n=26, 12.8%) and serositis (n=24, 11.8%) were also common as dominant manifestations. Pulmonary disease (n=16, 7.9%), heart disease (n= 4, 1.9%) and gastrointestinal disease (n=2, 0.9%) were less common. On admission, 11.3% of patients (n=23) had symptoms from at least 2 clinical domains as defined. Most patients (93.5%) had multisystem disease while only 6.5% had organ-dominant disease. Early diagnosis (within 3 months from hospitalization) was established in 86.6% while 27 patients had their SLE diagnosis more than 3 months from hospitalization. The mean lag time between the hospitalization and the diagnosis was approximately 14 months (SD 19.9). Overall, the mean interval between the onset of symptoms and the diagnosis was 48.2 months (SD 73.2). Importantly, a SLERPI >7 (suggesting probable SLE) at hospitalization was present in 92.5% of SLE patients with delayed diagnosis.Conclusion:One out of four SLE patients first present with moderate to severe disease necessitating hospitalization, while in approximately 15% of such patients, diagnosis is initially missed. Application of the SLERPI may facilitate early SLE diagnosis.References:[1]Adamichou C et al. Ann Rheum Dis. 2021; DOI: 10.1136/annrheumdis-2020-219069.[2]D Nikolopoulos et al. Lupus 2020; doi: 10.1177/0961203320908932.Acknowledgements:This project has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement No 742390)Disclosure of Interests:None declared
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