Abstract

Aims: This study aimed to analyse clinical and laboratory findings, prognosis, and survival of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) patients, differentiating according to gender, pubertal status, and renal involvement. Methods: Ninety-six pediatric SLE patients, diagnosed using ACR criteria, were retrospectively analyzed. Inclusion criteria comprised age under 18, meeting at least four ACR criteria, and six months of monitoring. Data encompassed demographics, symptoms, diagnosis, organ involvement, autoantibodies, treatment, prognosis, and survival. Categorization was based on gender and pubertal status. Renal biopsies followed WHO-ISN classification, with asymptomatic findings termed “silent lupus nephritis.” Biopsied patients were divided into proliferative and non-proliferative lupus nephritis categories, excluding irreversible damage cases. Outcomes studied included remission, relapse, end-stage renal failure, and mortality. Results: Among 96 participants, females constituted 82.3%, males 17.7%, resulting in a female-to-male ratio of 4.6:1. Mean age at diagnosis was 11.9 years, with 37 prepubertal (38.5%) and 59 pubertal (61.5%) cases. Oral-nasal ulcers (p=0.01) were more prevalent in males related to system involvement. Nephrotic syndrome prevalence increased from 21.6% in prepubertal to 44.1% in pubertal cases (p=0.025). Positive Anticardiolipin IgM antibodies decreased from 56.2% in prepubertal to 25.9% in pubertal cases (p=0.047). Type IV lupus nephritis was predominant, followed by Type II, in prepubertal and pubertal groups and both genders. Proliferative lupus nephritis showed higher rates of renal involvement (95.7% vs. 65.6%), nephrotic syndrome (46.8% vs. 21.9%), proteinuria (89.4% vs. 62.5%), hematuria (57.4% vs. 28.1%), elevated creatinine (43.5% vs. 9.7%), and low albumin (67.4% vs. 23.3%). Cases with proliferative lupus nephritis had higher neuropsychiatric involvement (36.2% vs. 12.5%), seizures (25.5% vs. 3.1%, p=0.008), and increased hemolytic anemia rates (78.7% vs. 56.2%, p=0.033). Thirteen had silent lupus nephritis, revealing various types through biopsy. All reported deaths occurred within the first five years, resulting in stable 91% survival rates at 5, 10, and 15 years. Conclusion: This study provides insights into the clinical, prognostic, and survival characteristics of pediatric systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), revealing notable patterns related to gender, pubertal development, and renal involvement. There is an association between proliferative lupus nephritis and renal involvement, nephrotic syndrome, and neuropsychiatric symptoms. Significantly, silent lupus nephritis highlights the complex renal implications, necessitating diligent surveillance for prompt intervention.

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