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Multicenter Study
Mortality and risk factors of scleroderma renal crisis: a French retrospective study of 50 patients.
- L Teixeira, L Mouthon, A Mahr, A Berezné, C Agard, M Mehrenberger, L-H Noël, P Trolliet, C Frances, J Cabane, L Guillevin, and Group Français de Recherche sur le Sclérodermie (GFRS).
- Internal Medicine Department and Reference Center for Vasculitis and Systemic Sclerosis, Cochin Hospital, Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris, and UPRES EA 4058, Paris-Descartes University, Faculty of Medicine, France.
- Ann. Rheum. Dis. 2008 Jan 1; 67 (1): 110-6.
ObjectivesTo describe presentation and outcome of patients with scleroderma renal crisis (SRC).MethodsSRC was defined as rapidly progressive oliguric renal insufficiency and/or rapidly progressive arterial hypertension occurring during the course of systemic sclerosis (SSc). Chronic dialysis-free survival was analysed using multivariate Cox proportional hazards regression models. The risk for developing SRC associated with corticosteroid (CS) exposure during the preceding 1- or 3-month periods was analysed according to a case-crossover design.ResultsA total of 50 SSc patients aged 53.3 (14.5) (mean (SD)) years were included in the study. SRC occurred between 1979 and 2003, after a mean (SD) disease duration of 27.7 (49.1) months. A total of 43 (86%) patients had diffuse SSc, 5 (10%) had limited cutaneous SSc and 2 (4%) had SSc sine scleroderma. At the time of SRC, 10 (20%) patients were taking angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors, and mean creatininaemia was 468 (293) micromol/l. A total of 28 (56%) patients required haemodialysis. In all, 11 patients underwent a renal biopsy, all of them had specific vascular lesions of SRC. Multivariate analyses retained age >53 years and normal blood pressure as independent predictors of decreased dialysis-free survival. Exposure to CS prior to SRC was identified in 30 (60%) patients. The odds ratios for developing SRC associated with CS exposure during the preceding 1- or 3-month periods were 24.1 (95% CI 3.0-193.8) and 17.4 (95% CI 2.1-144.0), respectively.ConclusionSRC remains associated with severe morbidity and mortality. CS might increase the risk of developing SRC. Further studies are needed to confirm these results.
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