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Abstract Number: 1296

Pulse- Pediatric Update on Lupus in South Africa: Epidemiology and Management

Laura Lewandowski1, Laura Schanberg1, Nathan Thielman2 and Christiaan Scott3, 1Pediatric Rheumatology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, 2Duke Hubert Yeargan Center for Global Health, Durham, NC, 3Rheumatology, Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital, Cape Town, South Africa

Meeting: 2014 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting

Keywords: international, Pediatric rheumatology and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)

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Session Information

Title: Pediatric Rheumatology - Clinical and Therapeutic Aspects: Pediatric Lupus, Scleroderma and Myositis (ACR)

Session Type: Abstract Submissions (ACR)

Background/Purpose: In developed nations, SLE is more common and severe in people of African extraction than in Caucasians; however, the epidemiology of SLE in Africa is largely undetermined. Historically, the incidence of SLE in Africa was presumed to be low, but recent studies challenge this theory. In general, children present with higher disease activity, require more therapy, and accrue more organ damage than adult-onset patients. Although African children with SLE may be at high risk for poor outcomes, little research has investigated this population.  We have initiated the first prospective study of this high risk pediatric SLE (pSLE) population.  Here, we report the initial findings of the South African pSLE patients (PULSE cohort).

Methods: We conducted a retrospective chart review of pediatric and adult rheumatology and nephrology patients seen at 2 centers in Cape Town, South Africa from 1988-2014 meeting American College of Rheumatology criteria for pSLE.  Patient age, gender, race, and presenting features were recorded for the PULSE cohort and compared to previously described pSLE cohorts in South Africa and worldwide.

Results ; Initial review of patients yielded 68 patients (age 12.2; 83% female). The racial distribution was 65% colored, 26% black, 3% white, and 3% Asian/Indian. A much larger proportion of patients in our cohort are of colored or black race compared to a previously published South African cohort. Most patients presented with severe lupus nephritis (LN) (renal biopsy performed in 49%)). Of patients with LN, 83% presented with ISN class IV or higher.  Pediatric LN cohorts from developed nations report 6-7% progressing to end stage renal disease (ESRD), and reports from developing nations report 8-12%. Within the cohort, 13% went on to develop ESRD requiring transplant, strikingly higher than previously reported cohorts. Our cohort had severe disease at diagnosis (mean SLEDAI 20.4), compared to previously reported pSLE cohorts (SLEDAI 4-13). Also, the PULSE cohort had end organ damage with 63% of the cohort having a SLICC score >0 (mean SLICC 1.9), compared to only 23% in a previously reported US cohort of 221 pSLE patients.

Table 1. Demographic Information

 

PULSE cohort

South Africa 2014

n=68

Faller cohort

(South Africa, 2005)

 n=36

APPLE cohort (USA, 2010)

N=221

Average age (years)

12

11.5

15.7

Median Age (years)

12.2

Not reported

15.5

% Female

83

61

83

% Colored

65

14

Not reported

% Black

26

38

27 (African Am)

% Indian/Asian

3

1

13

% White

3

42

51

Table 2. International Society of Nephrology/ Renal Pathology Society 2003 Classification of Lupus Nephritis

Class of Lupus Nephritis

PULSE cohort

South Africa 2014

N=32

Toronto Cohort

N=43

I Minimal Change

0 (0%)

0 (0%)

II Mesangial

3 (9%)

10 (23%)

III Focal Proliferative

 

2 (6%)

11 (26%)

IV Diffuse Proliferative

 

17 (53%)

17 (40%)

V Membranous

 

7 (21%)

5 (11%)

VI Advanced Sclerosis

 

3 (9%)

Not Reported

Conclusion: The PULSE cohort is the largest registry of pSLE patients in Africa to date. Preliminary findings show these children present with high disease activity and progress to end organ damage at higher rates than pSLE cohorts in developed nations.


Disclosure:

L. Lewandowski,
None;

L. Schanberg,
None;

N. Thielman,
None;

C. Scott,
None.

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