Press Release
For More Information, Contact Tammy McCoy (404) 633-3777
Embargoed for Release at 5:30 PM ET, Friday Oct. 24, 2003
Arthritis News
PROLONGED REMISSION IN LUPUS IS RARE,
CONTINUED OBSERVATION NECESSARY
ORLANDO, FLORIDA—Prolonged remission, that
is, no evidence of disease activity or treatment
for at least five consecutive years, is rare
in patients with lupus, according to research
presented this week at the American College of
Rheumatology
Annual Scientific Meeting in Orlando, Florida.
A
study of 704 patients with lupus was undertaken
to determine the likelihood of prolonged remission
in lupus and to assess what, if any, shared
characteristics or features could be identified among patients
in sustained remission. Study participants
were
drawn from the University of Toronto Lupus
Clinic Database of patients registered between 1970
and 1997, who were followed at the Clinic at
least every 18 months. Of these, 12 patients
achieved prolonged remission. Investigators looked at
the
entire study population at the time of disease
presentation to the Clinic, and there were
no statistically significant differences between
the
12 patients
with prolonged remission and the rest of the
group. The only statistically significant differences
between the prolonged remission group and the
remainder
of the study population were that at any time
leading up to the period of remission, those
patients in
prolonged remission were less likely to have
been on corticosteroid or immunosuppressant
therapy, to be anti dsDNA antibody positive (a blood test
which indicates the presence of active lupus)
and
in addition, they had a lower level of disease
activity over time.
Systemic lupus erythematosus,
often referred to as SLE or lupus, is a chronic
inflammatory
disorder resulting from an abnormality of the
immune system,
which normally functions to protect the body
against cancers and invading infections. In SLE,
the immune
system is over-active and produces too many abnormal
antibodies that react with the patient’s
own tissues. The exact cause of lupus is not
known, but heredity, environment and hormonal
changes may be involved. Lupus affects 1.4 million
Americans,
and most of them are women.
“Although we have made great strides in prolonging
survival in patients with SLE, very few patients
have a prolonged period of being disease and
treatment free,” said Murray Urowitz, MD, Director,
Centre for Prognosis Studies in the Rheumatic Diseases,
Professor of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto
Western Hospital, and an investigator in the study. “Thus
we achieve disease suppression rather than disease
remission. Therefore with current therapies continued
vigilance for disease recurrence is necessary.”
The American College of Rheumatology is the professional
organization for rheumatologists and health professionals
who share a dedication to healing, preventing
disability and curing arthritis and related rheumatic
and
musculoskeletal diseases. For more information
on the ACR’s annual meeting, see www.rheumatology.org/annual.
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