University of Cincinnati and Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Institute of Translational Medicine and Alder Hey Children's NHS Foundation Trust, Liverpool, UK.
Arthritis Care Res (Hoboken). 2019 May;71(5):579-590. doi: 10.1002/acr.23834.
To develop a Childhood Lupus Improvement Index (CHILI) as a tool to measure response to therapy in childhood-onset systemic lupus erythematosus (cSLE), with a focus on clinically relevant improvement (CRI ).
Pediatric nephrology and rheumatology subspecialists (n = 213) experienced in cSLE management were invited to define CRI and rate a total of 433 unique patient profiles for the presence/absence of CRI . Patient profiles included the following cSLE core response variables (CRVs): global assessment of patient well-being (patient-global), physician assessment of cSLE activity (MD-global), disease activity index score (here, we used the Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Disease Activity Index), urine protein-to-creatinine ratio, and Child Health Questionnaire physical summary score. Percentage and absolute changes in these cSLE-CRVs (baseline versus follow-up) were considered in order to develop candidate algorithms and validate their performance (sensitivity, specificity, area under the receiver operating characteristic curve [AUC]; range 0-1).
During an international consensus conference, unanimous agreement on a definition of CRI was achieved; cSLE experts (n = 13) concurred (100%) that the preferred CHILI algorithm considers absolute changes in the cSLE-CRVs. After transformation to a range of 0-100, a CHILI score of ≥54 had outstanding accuracy for identifying CRI (AUC 0.93, sensitivity 81.1%, and specificity 84.2%). CHILI scores also reflect minor, moderate, and major improvement for values exceeding 15, 68, and 92, respectively (all AUC ≥0.92, sensitivity ≥93.1%, and specificity ≥73.4%).
The CHILI is a new, seemingly highly accurate index for measuring CRI in cSLE over time. This index is useful to categorize the degree of response to therapy in children and adolescents with cSLE.
开发儿童狼疮改善指数(CHILI)作为衡量儿童发病系统性红斑狼疮(cSLE)治疗反应的工具,重点关注临床相关改善(CRI)。
邀请儿科肾脏病学和风湿病学专家(n=213)参与 cSLE 管理,定义 CRI,并对总共 433 个独特的患者概况进行评估,以确定是否存在 CRI。患者概况包括以下 cSLE 核心反应变量(CRV):患者整体健康评估(患者整体)、医生对 cSLE 活动的评估(MD-global)、疾病活动指数评分(这里我们使用系统性红斑狼疮疾病活动指数)、尿蛋白与肌酐比值以及儿童健康问卷身体总分。为了开发候选算法并验证其性能(敏感性、特异性、接收者操作特征曲线下面积[AUC];范围 0-1),考虑了这些 cSLE-CRV 的百分比和绝对变化(基线与随访)。
在一次国际共识会议上,专家们就 CRI 的定义达成了一致意见;cSLE 专家(n=13)一致认为(100%)首选的 CHILI 算法考虑了 cSLE-CRV 的绝对变化。在转换为 0-100 的范围后,CHILI 评分≥54 对识别 CRI 具有出色的准确性(AUC 0.93、敏感性 81.1%和特异性 84.2%)。CHILI 评分还反映了超过 15、68 和 92 时的轻微、中度和显著改善,其 AUC 均≥0.92,敏感性≥93.1%,特异性≥73.4%。
CHILI 是一种新的、似乎非常准确的指数,用于衡量 cSLE 随时间的 CRI。该指数可用于对儿童和青少年 cSLE 患者的治疗反应程度进行分类。