Andrade Rosa M, Alarcón Graciela S, Fernández Mónica, Apte Mandar, Vilá Luis M, Reveille John D
University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL 35294-3408, USA.
Arthritis Rheum. 2007 Feb;56(2):622-30. doi: 10.1002/art.22375.
To determine the impact of the patient's sex on the manifestations and outcome of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE).
We studied SLE patients who were ages 16 years or older and had a disease duration of < or =5 years at the time of enrollment in the LUpus in MInorities, NAture versus nurture cohort, a multiethnic cohort consisting of Hispanic, African American, and Caucasian patients. Socioeconomic/demographic, clinical, and serologic features, as well as disease activity (by the Systemic Lupus Activity Measure, Revised) and damage accrual (by the Systemic Lupus International Collaborating Clinics/American College of Rheumatology Damage Index) were compared between male and female patient groups. Multivariable analyses using male sex and damage accrual as dependent variables were then performed.
Sixty-three male SLE patients (10.2%) from all ethnic groups were included. The mean ages of the male and female patients were comparable. Factors that were either more frequent or tended to be more frequent among male SLE patients were Caucasian ethnicity, smoking, alcohol use, lupus anticoagulant (LAC) positivity, and renal involvement, whereas musculoskeletal involvement was less common. American College of Rheumatology criteria accrual time and disease duration were shorter in the male patients; damage was more common and of higher magnitude in this group. LAC positivity, shorter disease duration, and higher early damage scores were independently associated with male SLE. Male sex was a strong predictor of baseline damage, measured as a categorical variable (t-test = 2.357, beta-standardized coefficient 0.113; P = 0.019) or a continuous variable (hazard ratio 3.179 [95% confidence interval 1.999-5.056]; P < 0.001). Male sex was also positively associated with the development of damage over most of the course of the disease.
Poorer long-term prognosis among men with SLE appears to be decisively determined by their accelerated development of damage, particularly early in the course of the disease.
确定患者性别对系统性红斑狼疮(SLE)临床表现及预后的影响。
我们研究了年龄在16岁及以上、入组“少数族裔狼疮:先天与后天队列研究”时病程≤5年的SLE患者,该多民族队列由西班牙裔、非裔美国人和白人患者组成。比较了男性和女性患者组的社会经济/人口统计学、临床和血清学特征,以及疾病活动度(采用修订的系统性狼疮活动度测量方法)和损伤累积情况(采用系统性狼疮国际协作临床中心/美国风湿病学会损伤指数)。然后以男性性别和损伤累积为因变量进行多变量分析。
纳入了来自所有种族的63例男性SLE患者(10.2%)。男性和女性患者的平均年龄相当。在男性SLE患者中更常见或倾向于更常见的因素包括白人种族、吸烟、饮酒、狼疮抗凝物(LAC)阳性和肾脏受累,而肌肉骨骼受累则较少见。男性患者达到美国风湿病学会标准的时间和病程较短;该组损伤更常见且程度更高。LAC阳性、较短的病程和较高的早期损伤评分与男性SLE独立相关。男性性别是基线损伤的有力预测因素,无论是作为分类变量(t检验=2.357,β标准化系数0.113;P=0.019)还是连续变量(风险比3.179[95%置信区间1.999 - 5.056];P<0.001)。在疾病的大部分病程中,男性性别也与损伤的发生呈正相关。
SLE男性患者较差的长期预后似乎主要由其损伤的加速发展决定,尤其是在疾病早期。