Cyrielle Parmentier, Solene Victor, Claire Dossier, Jean Daniel Delbet, Julien Hogan, Antoine Mouche, Olivia Boyer, Tim Ulinski
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Intravenous steroid pulses (SP) are successfully used for the treatment of patients with idiopathic nephrotic syndrome (INS) resistant to oral prednisone.
Methods: We performed a retrospective analysis of all patients in the three pediatric nephrology centers of the Paris region from 2002 to 2022 who were resistant to a 30-day course of oral prednisone and who received SP for their first INS flare and analyzed their disease course over 4 years.
Results: Forty-seven patients (17 girls), median age 3.4 years, were analyzed. Of them, 68% reached remission within 7 days of SP. No significant short-term side effects were noted. Half of the patients started immunosuppressive treatment immediately after their first remission and 62% of them relapsed at least once, whereas all the patients who did not receive immunosuppressive treatment since their first remission relapsed. Among the SP-sensitive patients, 75% needed calcineurin inhibitor (CNI) or B-cell depletion during their disease course to achieve stable remission. Forty-two percent of the whole cohort received B-cell-depleting agents. Among the 15 SP-resistant patients, all received CNI. Twelve/fifteen patients reached remission. After 4 years, 68% among the SP-sensitive patients and 87% of SP-resistant patients still had an active disease.
Conclusions: SP are helpful to obtain rapid remission in pediatric INS patients resistant to oral steroids. However, as most SP-sensitive patients need immunosuppressive drugs, mainly CNI and B-cell-depleting agents it could be interesting to discuss the possibility to start CNI directly after the 30-day course of prednisone instead of SP.
期刊介绍:
International Pediatric Nephrology Association
Pediatric Nephrology publishes original clinical research related to acute and chronic diseases that affect renal function, blood pressure, and fluid and electrolyte disorders in children. Studies may involve medical, surgical, nutritional, physiologic, biochemical, genetic, pathologic or immunologic aspects of disease, imaging techniques or consequences of acute or chronic kidney disease. There are 12 issues per year that contain Editorial Commentaries, Reviews, Educational Reviews, Original Articles, Brief Reports, Rapid Communications, Clinical Quizzes, and Letters to the Editors.