Abstract

Introduction Lupus nephritis (LN) affects almost two-thirds of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) patients. Despite initial aggressive therapy, up to 25% of patients with LN will progress to permanent renal damage. Conventional serum markers for LN lack the sensitivity of an ideal biomarker. Urinary neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (UNGAL) is an excellent biomarker for early diagnosis of acute kidney injury and predicting renal outcomes. Objective To measure UNGAL among LN patients to correlate its levels with renal disease activity and to investigate its predictive performance in response to induction therapy. Patients and Methods. 40 SLE patients with biopsy-proven LN class III, IV, or V were randomly selected. The study was conducted in the internal medicine department and outpatient clinic in Ain Shams University Hospitals and completed after six months. UNGAL was measured at baseline, three-month follow-up, and after complete induction therapy. Results In LN patients at baseline, the mean serum creatinine was 2.57 ± 0.96 mg/dL and the mean UNGAL was 33.50 ± 18.34 ng/dL. Mean UNGAL levels of complete response, partial response, and nonresponse groups were 14.48 ± 2.99 ng/mL, 34.49 ± 4.09 ng/mL, and 62.07 ± 14.44 ng/mL, respectively. Based on the ROC curve, we found a better performance of baseline UNGAL to discriminate the complete response group from partial and nonresponse groups to predict response to induction, outperforming conventional biomarkers. The area under the curve was 0.943, and the best cutoff level was 26.5 ng/mL (92.31% sensitivity and 88.89% specificity). Conclusion UNGAL performed better than conventional biomarkers in predicting response to treatment of active LN.

Highlights

  • Lupus nephritis (LN) affects almost two-thirds of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) patients

  • We investigated the performance of Urinary neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (UNGAL) in predicting treatment outcomes compared to conventional biomarkers of LN disease activity

  • Findings from the present study indicate that urinary Neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL) might be a biomarker of the renal response to induction therapy outperforming serum creatinine and other conventional biomarkers

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Summary

Introduction

Lupus nephritis (LN) affects almost two-thirds of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) patients. To measure UNGAL among LN patients to correlate its levels with renal disease activity and to investigate its predictive performance in response to induction therapy. Based on the ROC curve, we found a better performance of baseline UNGAL to discriminate the complete response group from partial and nonresponse groups to predict response to induction, outperforming conventional biomarkers. SLE is a challenging condition that has an unpredictable course that presents unique issues in diagnosis and management [1]. It mostly affects women during the childbearing period, up to 20% of cases being affected in childhood; it is characterized by loss of self-tolerance and development of autoantibodies (autoAbs) to nuclear selfantigens [2]. Considered to be a benign procedure, sometimes can have serious complications, even in expert hands, a reason why this cannot be performed repeatedly to assess renal status. erefore, the goal of studying newer LN biomarkers is to overcome the drawbacks of the existing

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