Intestinal vasculitis is a serious and often underrecognized complication of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) usually managed with high-dose corticosteroids. We report a case of corticosteroid refractory colitis (likely due to intestinal vasculitis) that achieved remission with a single cycle of high-dose rituximab. This has not previously been described to our knowledge. A 46-year-old woman with SLE presented with 1-week history of bloody diarrhea, abdominal pain, worsening joint pains, fatigue, and mouth ulcers. There was evidence of increased SLE activity with low C4, raised anti-double-stranded DNA antibody, leukopenia, and anemia. Colonoscopy showed active pancolitis (confirmed histologically). A diagnosis of acute colitis associated with active SLE was made, and she received intravenous methylprednisolone 1 g daily for 3 days followed by 60 mg oral prednisolone daily. She continued to have symptomatic colitis with worsening anemia requiring frequent blood transfusions. She then received 2 doses of rituximab 1 g (750 mg/m(2)) 2 weeks apart that led to improvement in colitis symptoms and SLE disease activity over the next 4 weeks. A repeat colonoscopy (and histology) confirmed good resolution of colitis. Six months later, she continued to be in remission with low-dose prednisolone. Intestinal vasculitis should be considered as a possible cause of acute abdominal pain in SLE as early recognition and treatment can improve long-term survival. Rituximab can be an effective alternative for patients refractory to conventional treatment.
Rituximab has been used off-label for a range of autoimmune diseases in this population with a high proportion of Aboriginal patients successfully and safely in the majority of cases.
Background
Saksenaea species (spp.) are uncommon causes of mucormycosis but are emerging pathogens mostly associated with trauma and soil contamination often in immunocompetent hosts. Due to lack of sporulation in the laboratory, diagnosis and susceptibility testing is difficult so optimal treatment regimens are unknown.
Case presentation
A 67 year-old man from the Northern Territory in Australia, with a history of eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis, developed disseminated Saksenaea infection after initially presenting with symptoms consistent with bacterial pyelonephritis. Despite a delay in diagnosis; with aggressive surgical management and dual therapy with amphotericin B and posaconazole, he survived.
Conclusions
We describe an unusual case of disseminated infection with a favourable outcome to date.
The nonnull moments of the likelihood ratio statistic for testing equality of covariance matrices of completely symmetric Gaussian models are obta.ined in terms of the Lauricella's hypergeometric functions and also in terms of zonal polynomials. Then the nonnull asymptotic distribution of the statistic is derived under certain alternatives for unequal samples.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.