الملخص
To determine the efficacy and safety of intermittent intravenous pulse cyclophosphamide in patients of severe systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), 50 patients having severe/refractory lupus nephritis, vasculitis or neuropsychiatric manifestations were treated with 3 weekly pulses of cyclophosphamide for 6 such pulses. This treatment was found to be associated with significant and sustained improvement during a 2 yr follow up with respect to the mean renal activity score, individual renal parameters (proteinuria, erythrocyturia, and serum creatinine levels), focal neurological manifestations, vasculitic lesions, antinuclear antibody titers, complement component C3, anti-dsDNA antibodies levels and ESR. There was a sustained decrease in the overall mean disease activity score, and the mean daily dose of prednisolone (pretreatment 32.62 mg daily to 3.75 mg daily after 24 months). There was a significant decline in the percentage and absolute B cell count after 7, 14 and 21 days of this treatment. Effect on other lymphocyte subsets (CD3+, CD4+ and CD8+) was not marked. Pulse cyclophosphamide could therefore be an effective and less toxic form of treatment in patients with SLE having severe lupus nephritis, focal neurological lesions or vasculitis.
الموضوعات
Adolescent , Adult , Child , Cyclophosphamide/administration & dosage , Drug Administration Schedule , Female , Humans , Infusions, Intravenous , Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic/complications , Lupus Nephritis/complications , Male , Time Factorsالملخص
The lymphocyte phenotypes were enumerated in 10 patients with collagen diseases at 0 h, 4 h, 24 h and 7 days after a megadose (100 mg) iv pulse dexamethasone. A significant decrease in CD3 (from a mean of 2324.3/mm3 to 705.9/mm3) and CD4 (from a mean of 1642.6 to 317.6/mm3) cells was observed at 4 h, which recovered partially by 24 h (186.7 and 1226.3/mm3 respectively) and completely at 7 days (2496.1 and 1838.4/mm3). A transient decrease in CD8 cells at 4 h was also observed. There was no significant effect on B cells.