Department of Autoimmune Diseases, Hospital Clínic, Catalonia, Spain.
Lupus. 2010 Apr;19(4):412-8. doi: 10.1177/0961203309361353.
Although less than 1% of patients with the antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) develop the catastrophic variant, its potentially lethal outcome emphasizes its importance in clinical medicine today. However, the rarity of this variant makes it extraordinarily difficult to study in any systematic way. In order to put together all of the published case reports as well as the new diagnosed cases from all over the world, an international registry of patients with catastrophic APS (CAPS Registry) was created in 2000 by the European Forum on Antiphospholipid Antibodies (see http://www.med.ub.es/MIMMUN/FORUM/CAPS.HTM). Currently, it documents the entire clinical, laboratory and therapeutic data of more than 300 patients whose data has been fully registered.
虽然只有不到 1%的抗磷脂综合征(APS)患者会出现灾难性变异,但它潜在的致命后果强调了它在当今临床医学中的重要性。然而,这种变异的罕见性使得以任何系统的方式对其进行研究变得非常困难。为了汇集所有已发表的病例报告以及来自世界各地的新诊断病例,2000 年由欧洲抗磷脂抗体论坛(European Forum on Antiphospholipid Antibodies)创建了灾难性抗磷脂综合征患者国际注册处(CAPS Registry)(请参见 http://www.med.ub.es/MIMMUN/FORUM/CAPS.HTM)。目前,它记录了 300 多名患者的全部临床、实验室和治疗数据,这些患者的数据已经全部登记。