| Literature DB >> 27651918 |
Edith M Williams1, Larisa Bruner2, Alyssa Adkins3, Caroline Vrana4, Ayaba Logan5, Diane Kamen6, James C Oates7.
Abstract
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a multi-organ autoimmune disorder that can cause significant morbidity and mortality. A large body of evidence has shown that African-Americans experience the disease more severely than other racial-ethnic groups. Relevant literature for the years 2000 to August 2015 were obtained from systematic searches of PubMed, Scopus, and the EBSCOHost platform that includes MEDLINE, CINAHL, etc. to evaluate research focused on SLE in African-Americans. Thirty-six of the 1502 articles were classified according to their level of evidence. The systematic review of the literature reported a wide range of adverse outcomes in African-American SLE patients and risk factors observed in other mono and multi-ethnic investigations. Studies limited to African-Americans with SLE identified novel methods for more precise ascertainment of risk and observed novel findings that hadn't been previously reported in African-Americans with SLE. Both environmental and genetic studies included in this review have highlighted unique African-American populations in an attempt to isolate risk attributable to African ancestry and observed increased genetic influence on overall disease in this cohort. The review also revealed emerging research in areas of quality of life, race-tailored interventions, and self-management. This review reemphasizes the importance of additional studies to better elucidate the natural history of SLE in African-Americans and optimize therapeutic strategies for those who are identified as being at high risk.Entities:
Keywords: Autoimmune Diseases; Epidemiology; Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
Year: 2016 PMID: 27651918 PMCID: PMC5013381 DOI: 10.1136/lupus-2015-000144
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lupus Sci Med ISSN: 2053-8790
Summary of two studies examining lupus nephritis (LN) in African-Americans
| Author, year | N | Objective | Results | Conclusions | Level of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Franco | 67 | To correlate clinical, serological and immunological variables with the development of ESRD requiring dialysis in the African-American population | Renal function was more decreased in the proliferative forms of LN. Erythrocyte sedimentation rate was increased mostly in classes III, IV and V. Complement levels were uniformly decreased in the population studied. C4 was more significantly decreased in the proliferative forms of LN. Higher creatinine values, low GFR, class IV LN and hypertension were associated with ESRD in this population. Patients with class V LN had significantly less risk to progress to ESRD (p values<0.05). | Hypertension, higher creatinine, proliferative nephritis and decreased GFR are associated with ESRD requiring dialysis. | III |
| Lea, 2002 | N/A | To explore the higher incidence of progression to ESRD in African-Americans | Hypertension and proteinuria are well-defined prognostic factors that significantly impact the course of renal disease progression for most forms of renal disease. Clinical trials in LN to date have not examined the role of aggressive antihypertensive or antiproteinuric therapies in retarding renal disease progression. | Additional studies are needed to better elucidate the natural history of LN in African-Americans and to optimise therapeutic strategies for those who are identified as being at high risk. | V |
ESRD, end-stage renal disease; GFR, glomerular filtration rate; N/A, not available.
Summary of three articles relating lupus and the environment in African-Americans
| Author, year | N | Objective | Results | Conclusions | Level of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carroll | 80 | To assess links between environmental exposures and autoimmunity | With more meticulously collected exposure data, chemicals associated with ANA status were identified | Even with a small sample significant exposure–outcome relationships can be detected | III |
| Terrell | N/A | To use CBPR practices to educate impacted residents and enable their participation in efforts to get a nearby waste site remediated | The impacted community was involved in information gathering and analysis and gained necessary skills to assess current conditions and prevent duplication of injustices | CBPR methods were used to empower a community and enable a community-driven remediation plan to be endorsed by the governing agency | IV |
| Williams | 13 | To explore patients' experiences and concerns with their living environment and their perceptions of environmental effects on their health and disease status | Participants had the perception that there are components in the environment that people come into contact with that are potentially hazardous, and there was a shared concern about the presence of toxic waste in the soil in their community | The community recognises need for education, environmental change and the impact of public policy on these efforts | III |
ANA, antinuclear antibodies; CBPR, community-based participatory research; N/A, not available.
Summary of an article exploring vitamin D in African-Americans with lupus
| Author, year | N | Objective | Results | Conclusions | Level of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hoffecker | 118 | To evaluate relationships between vitamin D status, cellular ageing (telomere length) and antitelomere antibodies among African-American Gullah women with SLE. | Patients with SLE had higher antitelomere antibody titres and significantly shorter telomeres compared to age-matched and gender-matched controls without SLE. The patients who remained vitamin D deficient tended to have shorter telomeres than those patients whose 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels came back to normal levels. | Increasing 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels in African-American patients with SLE may be beneficial in maintaining telomere length and preventing cellular ageing. Antitelomere antibody levels may be a promising biomarker of SLE status and disease activity. | III |
SLE, systemic lupus erythematosus.
Summary of an article exploring skin disorders in African-Americans
| Author, year | N | Objective | Results | Conclusions | Level of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Miteva | 60 | To perform a retrospective review of 60 scalp biopsies from African-American patients | Features characteristic of the African-American scalp include: golf club-shaped bulb, elliptical shape of the hair shaft, asymmetrical outer root sheath and paired grouping of hair follicles | The clues reported here aim to help the dermatopathologists to recognise at a glance that they are dealing with a scalp biopsy from an African-American patient; make the most probable diagnosis by connecting the clues; and understand the morphological basis for the susceptibility of the African hair to damage | IV |
Four studies of traditional chronic disease risk factors in African-Americans with lupus
| Author, year | N | Objective | Results | Conclusions | Level of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Formica | 64 500 | To prospectively investigated associations of smoking and alcohol consumption with incident SLE in the Black Women's Health Study | 67 women reported a new diagnosis of SLE and use of appropriate medication for that illness. In multivariate analyses, an increased risk of SLE among smokers was observed, but no effect of alcohol consumption on risk. | The inverse association of alcohol consumption with SLE found in studies of prevalent disease may have resulted from women with SLE giving up drinking | II |
| Williams | 124 | To investigate the relationship between carotid atherosclerosis and inflammation in African-American women | Tumour necrosis factor-α was significantly related to lupus, hypertension, body mass index and carotid intima media thickness, indicating this could be an important factor to consider in future studies of cardiovascular risk in African-American women with lupus. | There may be other factors in the link between SLE and CVD | III |
| Williams | 101 | To characterise the prevalence of traditional CVD risk factors and the markers of subclinical atherosclerosis | There were significant differences between SLE cases and controls in the areas of current smoking (18% of SLE cases, 15% of controls, p=0.01), average fasting glucose (85 mg/dL in SLE cases, 98 mg/dL in controls, p=0.02) and high blood pressure (68% of SLE cases, 42% of controls, p=0.02). SLE cases also showed non-significantly higher high-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels, lower low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels and lower body mass index. | Larger studies are recommended to elucidate non-traditional mechanisms that may modulate some of the increased risk for CVD associated with SLE in women | III |
| Liang | Determining the biology, risk factors and the prevention of atherosclerosis in individuals with SLE | Not a great deal is known about the risk factors for SLE in African-Americans, although there are data to suggest that they may not be identical to those seen in Caucasian populations. | The study of the best and most effective means to prevent atherosclerotic vascular disease in SLE and in African-Americans with SLE should be a major priority | V |
CVD, cardiovascular disease; SLE, systemic lupus erythematosus.
Nine genetic studies in African-Americans with lupus
| Author, year | N | Objective | Results | Conclusions | Level of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Larsen | 546 | To investigate whether APOL1 risk alleles associate with SLE-associated CG | Evaluation of biopsies from 188 cases with zero risk alleles, 264 cases with one risk allele and 94 cases with two risk alleles revealed 26 cases with CG, and APOL1 was strongly associated with SLE-associated CG (p<0.001). | APOL1 genotyping of African-American patients with SLE might help identify patients at risk for CG, a phenomenon with a poor prognosis often resistant to treatment | III |
| Freedman | 1389 | To investigate whether the APOL1 nephropathy risk alleles G1/G2, common in African-Americans and rare in European Americans, contribute to the ethnic disparity in risk | Two risk alleles, G1/G2, were strongly associated with SLE-ESRD, with 25% of cases and 12% of controls having two nephropathy alleles (OR 2.57, recessive model p=1.49×10−9). The population-attributable risk (adjusted for age, sex and admixture) for ESRD among patients with G1/G2 polymorphisms was 0.26 compared with 0.003 among European American patients. The mean time from SLE diagnosis to ESRD development was about 2 years earlier among individuals with APOL1 risk genotypes (p=0.01). | The high frequency of APOL1 G1/G2 alleles in African-Americans with near absence in European Americans explains an important proportion of the increased risk of LN-ESRD in African-Americans | III |
| Namjou | 5 | To assess and characterise C1q deficiency in an African-American lupus pedigree | A novel homozygote start codon mutation in C1qA gene that changes amino acid methionine to arginine at position 1 (Met1Arg) was identified in an African-American patient with lupus and C1q deficiency and her family members, along with absence of total complement activity consistent with a recessive pattern of inheritance. | The identification of new mutation in C1qA gene that disrupts the start codon (ATG to AGG (Met1Arg)) expands the knowledge and importance of the C1q gene in the pathogenesis of lupus in the high-risk African-American population | III |
| Ramos | 3364 | To analyse variation in reactive intermediate genes for association with SLE in two populations with African ancestry | The glutathione reductase gene GSR (rs2253409; p=0.0014, OR 1.26, 95% CI 1.09 to 1.44) was the most significant single SNP association in African-Americans. In the Gullah, the NADH dehydrogenase NDUFS4 (rs381575; p=0.0065, OR 2.10, 95% CI 1.23 to 3.59) and NO synthase gene NOS1 (rs561712; p=0.0072, OR 0.62, 95% CI 0.44 to 0.88) were most strongly associated with SLE. When both populations were analysed together, GSR remained the most significant effect (rs2253409; p=0.00072, OR 1.26, 95% CI 1.10 to 1.44). | Results suggest distinct patterns of association with SLE in African-derived populations | III |
| Ruiz-Narvaez | 1148 | To conduct a screening of the MHC region for SNPs and the deletion of the | The rs9271366 SNP was most strongly associated with SLE (OR, OR=1.70, p=5.6×10−5). Conditional haplotype analysis revealed three other SNPs, rs204890 (OR=1.86, p=1.2×10−4), rs2071349 (OR=1.53, p=1.0×10−3), and rs2844580 (OR=1.43, p=1.3×10−3) to be associated with SLE independent of the rs9271366 SNP. A genotype score combining the four newly identified SNPs showed an additive risk according to the number of high-risk alleles (OR=1.67 per high-risk allele, p<0.0001). | There are four independent signals in the MHC region associated with risk of SLE in African-American women | III |
| Sánchez | 3748 | To examine whether some of the same susceptibility loci increase lupus risk in African-American individuals | Authors found the first evidence of genetic association between lupus in African-American patients and five susceptibility loci ( | Novel genetic susceptibility loci for lupus were identified in African-Americans and authors demonstrated that the majority of lupus susceptibility loci examined confer lupus risk across multiple ethnicities | III |
| Dozmorov | 40 | To study the higher rates of lupus-related ESRD in African-Americans | A strong link was detected between APOL1 G1 and G2 variants and LN-ESRD in African-Americans. | Findings further support the role of G1 and G2 variants of APOL1 gene in higher rates of lupus-related ESRD in African-Americans | III |
| Wu | 361 | To explore the −844C genotype in African-Americans with SLE | There was enrichment of the –844C homozygous genotype in the patients with SLE compared with ethnically matched controls. | Findings further support the potential importance of SNPs in regulatory regions | III |
| Freedman | N/A | To review the current status of APOL1-associated nephropathy | There is a genetic association between the APOL1 gene and several severe non-diabetic forms of kidney disease in African-Americans that nears Mendelian inheritance patterns. This associated accounts for and account for a large percentage of glomerulosclerosis in populations of African ancestry. | Emerging data support an important role for APOL1 in the progression of kidney disease | V |
APOL1, apolipoprotein L1; CG, collapsing glomerulopathy; ESRD, end-stage renal disease; HLA, human leukocyte antigen; LN, lupus nephritis; MHC, major histocompatibility complex; N/A, not available; SLE, systemic lupus erythematosus; SNP, single-nucleotide polymorphism.
Summary of four articles on connections to Africa in African-Americans with lupus
| Author, year | N | Objective | Results | Conclusions | Level of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fraser | 18 | To define the haplotypes with C4A-deleted alleles in African-Americans | Haplotypes HLA-DRB1p1503, HLA-B53, B44031 or B18 and HLA-DRB1p0301 and HLA-B53 and B8 were observed in conjunction with C4A gene deletions. | This is the first study to define the HLA haplotypes bearing C4A gene deletions in populations of sub-Saharan African ancestry | III |
| Gilkeson | 184 | To define whether a lupus gradient exists between African-Americans and Africans | The prevalence of serum antinuclear antibodies in the two cohorts was comparable, though there was a significantly increased prevalence of antiphospholipid and anti-Sm antibodies in the Sierra Leone cohort. Seropositivity for common viral infections was significantly higher in women from Sierra Leone, while serum 25-OH vitamin D levels were drastically lower in the Gullah population. | While the prevalence of autoimmunity is similar in the two populations, there are significant environmental differences that may impact progression to autoimmune disease | III |
| Kamen | 472 | To define the genetic and environmental factors contributing to SLE in the Gullah population | The severity of lupus in the Gullah population was similar to that in other African-American populations, whereas skin disease and familial disease prevalence were increased in the Gullah. | Findings suggest that there is an increased genetic influence on overall disease in this cohort compared with that in other African-American cohorts, which confirms the unique nature of this cohort | III |
SLE, systemic lupus erythematosus.
Five studies of quality of life in African-Americans with lupus
| Author, year | N | Objective | Results | Conclusions | Level of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barnado | 126 | To study health-related quality of life in African-American patients with SLE from the Gullah population of South Carolina, which has a homogeneous genetic and environmental background and high prevalence of multipatient families with SLE | Cases had a lower PCS (41.8 vs 52.3, p<0.01), but not MCS (55.0 vs 56.0, p=0.70) compared with related controls. None of the 11 SLE American College of Rheumatology criteria, disease duration or Systemic Lupus International Collaborating Clinics Damage Index was associated with either PCS or MCS. | The lack of effect of SLE on MCS may be due to disease-coping mechanisms interplaying with cultural factors unique to the Gullah | III |
| Barnado | 126 | To compare pregnancy outcomes before and after SLE diagnosis to controls to test whether there is a predisease state that negatively affects pregnancy outcomes | The odds of adverse pregnancy outcomes all increased after SLE diagnosis compared with before diagnosis, even after adjustment for age, years of education, pregnancy number and medical coverage. | There may be a predisease state that predisposes to adverse pregnancy outcomes | III |
| Woods-Giscombé | 48 | To develop a preliminary conceptual framework for SWS by exploring women's descriptions of the superwoman role; perceptions of contextual factors, benefits and liabilities; and beliefs regarding how it influences health | According to the women in this study, the superwoman role involves sociohistorical and personal contextual factors as well as themes of survival and health status. | The SWS framework might be used to enhance future research on stress and African-American women's health | III |
| Chae | 578 | To examine associations between unfair treatment and disease damage among African-American women with SLE | Reporting any unfair treatment was associated with greater SLE damage compared with reporting no unfair treatment. | Unfair treatment contributes to worse disease outcomes among African-American women with SLE, and unfair treatment attributed to non-racial causes may have more detrimental effects on SLE damage | IV |
| Wallace, 2003 | N/A | To examine elevated rates of SLE in African-American women in the context of immune cognition | Disease is an internalised physiological image of external patterns of structured psychosocial stress, discrimination and social disintegration experienced by ethnic minorities in the USA. | Social and economic reform necessary to decrease disease among African-American women will significantly benefit all groups | V |
MCS, mental component summary; PCS, physical component summary; SLE, systemic lupus erythematosus; SWS, superwoman schema.
Two studies of race-tailored interventions in African-Americans with lupus
| Author, year | N | Objective | Results | Conclusions | Level of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yuen | 15 | To evaluate the effectiveness of a home-based exercise programme among sedentary African-American women with SLE | Perceived fatigue severity was significantly decreased; body weight and waist circumference were significantly reduced; and anxiety level and overall intensity of total pain experience were significantly reduced. | Findings provide preliminary support that the Wii Fit programme motivates this population to exercise, which leads to reduced fatigue, body weight, waist circumference, anxiety level and pain intensity. | II |
| Yuen | 14 | To explore the process associated with the motivation for playing Wii Fit among patients with SLE | Authors found five themes (enjoyment, health benefits, sense of accomplishment, convenience and personalised) that revealed why the participants were motivated to play the Wii Fit. However, several participants commented they were not able to do many activities, master certain games or figure out how to play some; as a result, they were bored with the limited selection of activities that they could do. | The motivational elements of the Wii Fit may contribute to improved exercise motivation and adherence in select sedentary African-American women with SLE. Results provide a better understanding on the important elements to incorporate in the development of sustainable home-based exercise programmes with interactive health video games for this population. | III |
SLE, systemic lupus erythematosus.
Five studies of self-management in African-Americans with lupus
| Author, year | N | Objective | Results | Conclusions | Level of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Drenkard | 49 | To pilot test the benefits of the CDSMP in low-income African-American patients with SLE | Authors witnessed significant improvements post intervention in the short-form 36 physical health component summary (p=0.032); self-efficacy (p=0.035); and several self-management behaviours: cognitive symptoms management (p=0.036); communication with physicians (p=0.01); and treatment adherence (p=0.01). | The CDSMP is a promising intervention for low-income African-Americans with SLE | II |
| Williams | 30 | To examine the relationship between psychosocial stress and underlying biological mechanisms that influence disease activity and pathology in a high-risk group | African-American patients with SLE experienced significant improvements in depression, social/role activities limitations, health distress, fatigue, pain and lupus self-efficacy. | This intervention has the potential to reduce health problems and costs in a debilitating, management-intensive chronic disease in the population subset at highest risk for the disease and should be more widely implemented and studied to more rigorously assess benefits | II |
| Williams | 30 | To link available disease information to endpoints examined in the cohort of 30 African-American lupus patients who participated in the BLESS study | Authors observed better outcomes in the intervention group following CDSMP workshops compared with the control group in the following areas: self-reported lupus flares, overall disease activity during the past 3 months, muscle pain and pain or stiffness in joints. | If widely implemented, morbidities and mortality related to lupus could be drastically reduced in African-Americans | III |
| Williams | 30 | To investigate relationships between stress, depression and various health behaviours in the cohort of 30 African-American lupus patients who participated in the BLESS study | Depressive symptoms had moderate effects upon social/role limitations and nights spent in the hospital. | Findings could have implications for developing interventions to improve disease experience and quality of life in African-American patients with SLE struggling with stress and/or depression | III |
| Williams | 330 | To characterise those who fully participated in the BLESS study and those who were non-compliant or non-responsive to recruitment attempts | Respondents and non-respondents to the BLESS study were similar with regard to demographic factors and disease indices, but study participants more quickly arrived at disease manifestations of renal disorder, haem disorder, and SLE diagnosis compared with non-respondents. | This information can be used to develop and refine future intervention activities | III |
BLESS, Balancing Lupus Experiences with Stress Strategies; CDSMP, Chronic Disease Self-Management Program; SLE, systemic lupus erythematosus.