Chaiamnuay Sumapa, Bertoli Ana M, Fernández Mónica, Apte Mandar, Vilá Luis M, Reveille John D, Alarcón Graciela S
Department of Medicine, Division of Clinical Immunology and Rheumatology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama, USA.
J Clin Rheumatol. 2007 Jun;13(3):128-33. doi: 10.1097/RHU.0b013e3180645865.
The aim of this study was to examine the impact of an increased body mass index (BMI) on disease activity, damage accrual, fatigue, self-reported health-related quality of life (HRQOL), and fibromyalgia in patients with lupus using longitudinal data from LUMINA, a large multiethnic cohort.
SLE patients (>/=4 ACR revised criteria), </=5 years disease duration at entry into the cohort (T0), of Hispanic (from Texas or from the Island of Puerto Rico), African American, or white ethnicity were included. BMI was ascertained at T0 or first recorded. The average scores from all visits for disease activity (SLAM-R), self-reported HRQOL (physical and mental component summary measures of the SF-36) and fatigue (Fatigue Severity Scale), the score at last visit for damage accrual (SLICC Damage Index), and fibromyalgia (ACR criteria), if present at any visit, were examined for their association with an increased BMI by univariable and multivariable analyses.
Three-hundred sixty-four patients were included; 28% were obese (BMI >/=30 kg/m). An increased BMI was associated with older age, less social support, higher degree of helplessness, depression, more abnormal illness-related behaviors, poorer self-reported HRQOL, fatigue, and fibromyalgia, but not with disease activity or damage accrual by univariable analyses. In multivariable analyses, BMI was independently associated with fibromyalgia but not with disease activity, fatigue, or self-reported HRQOL.
An increased BMI is independently associated with presence of fibromyalgia but not with disease activity, damage accrual, fatigue or self-reported quality of life in patients with SLE. Optimizing weight merits investigation to see if it can significantly impact this pervasive SLE-associated manifestation.
本研究旨在利用来自大型多民族队列LUMINA的纵向数据,探讨体重指数(BMI)升高对狼疮患者疾病活动度、损伤累积、疲劳、自我报告的健康相关生活质量(HRQOL)以及纤维肌痛的影响。
纳入符合美国风湿病学会(ACR)修订标准中至少4条、入组队列时(T0)病程≤5年、西班牙裔(来自德克萨斯州或波多黎各岛)、非裔美国人或白人的系统性红斑狼疮(SLE)患者。在T0时确定BMI或记录首次测量值。通过单变量和多变量分析,研究疾病活动度(SLAM-R)、自我报告的HRQOL(SF-36的身体和精神成分总结指标)、疲劳(疲劳严重程度量表)的所有访视平均得分,损伤累积(SLICC损伤指数)的末次访视得分,以及纤维肌痛(ACR标准,若在任何一次访视中出现)与BMI升高之间的关联。
共纳入364例患者;28%为肥胖患者(BMI≥30 kg/m²)。单变量分析显示,BMI升高与年龄较大、社会支持较少、无助感和抑郁程度较高、更多异常疾病相关行为、自我报告的HRQOL较差、疲劳和纤维肌痛相关,但与疾病活动度或损伤累积无关。多变量分析中,BMI与纤维肌痛独立相关,但与疾病活动度、疲劳或自我报告的HRQOL无关。
BMI升高与SLE患者纤维肌痛的存在独立相关,但与疾病活动度、损伤累积、疲劳或自我报告的生活质量无关。优化体重值得研究,以确定其是否能显著影响这种普遍存在的SLE相关表现。