| ID | 64036 |
| JaLCDOI | |
| FullText URL | |
| Author |
Kagawa, Hidetoshi
Department of Nephrology and Rheumatology, Japanese Red Cross Society Himeji Hospital
Yamanaka, Ryutaro
Department of Nephrology and Rheumatology, Japanese Red Cross Society Himeji Hospital
Hiromasa, Tsutomu
Department of Nephrology and Rheumatology, Japanese Red Cross Society Himeji Hospital
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| Abstract | This observational study aimed to clarify the long-term results of the combination of mizoribine (MZB), tacrolimus (TAC) and prednisolone as first-line therapy for lupus nephritis (LN). This was our institution’s standard therapy between 2009 and 2015, when we saw 36 patients with LN. When a patient thus treated achieved SLEDAI remission (= 0) and/or the prednisolone dose could be tapered to 5 mg/day, either MZB or TAC was stopped, and the other was continued for maintenance therapy. If treatment failure or relapse occurred, second-line therapy was introduced. At years 1 and 5, overall complete renal response and SLEDAI remission were 94% and 88%, and 50% and 62%, respectively. Excluding 2 cases lost to follow-up, medications after 5 years were as follows: 20 (59%) were stable on 1 drug (MZB or TAC), 11 (32%) required continuation of both drugs (MZB + TAC), and 3 (9%) required second-line therapy. The 5-year retention rate was 91% (non-secondline), with 0% of relapse in this group. Our first-line combination strategy showed high remission rates in the induction phase, and subsequent maintenance therapy demonstrated good outcomes for up to 5 years. Research that fine-tunes the order of therapeutic agents and institutes appropriate treatment goals may further improve long-term outcomes for patients with LN.
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| Keywords | combination therapy
first-line therapy
lupus nephritis
mizoribine
tacrolimus
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| Amo Type | Original Article
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| Publication Title |
Acta Medica Okayama
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| Published Date | 2022-10
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| Volume | volume76
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| Issue | issue5
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| Publisher | Okayama University Medical School
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| Start Page | 547
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| End Page | 555
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| ISSN | 0386-300X
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| NCID | AA00508441
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| Content Type |
Journal Article
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| language |
English
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| Copyright Holders | Copyright Ⓒ 2022 by Okayama University Medical School
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| File Version | publisher
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| Refereed |
True
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| PubMed ID | |
| Web of Science KeyUT |