| Literature DB >> 35568436 |
Najla Aljaberi1, Scott E Wenderfer2, Arjun Mathur3, Tingting Qiu4, Steffy Jose2, Angela Merritt3, James Rose5, Prasad Devarajan5, Bin Huang4, Hermine Brunner6.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The renal activity index for lupus (RAIL) measures lupus nephritis (LN) activity considering urine levels of 6 biomarkers (neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, kidney injury molecule-1, adiponectin, haemopexin, ceruloplasmin). We aimed to compare the accuracy of the RAIL and the renal domain-score of the SLE disease activity index (rSLEDAI) in detecting LN activity.Entities:
Keywords: autoimmunity; lupus erythematosus, systemic; lupus nephritis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35568436 PMCID: PMC9109101 DOI: 10.1136/lupus-2021-000631
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lupus Sci Med ISSN: 2053-8790
Figure 1Flow chart of the urine samples used in the analyses. Light grey box indicates the 32 samples used in the initial analysis. Dark grey boxes indicate the 246 samples used in the last analysis. & From 32 patients with active lupus nephritis (LN). In a supplementary analysis, 39 samples proximal to kidney biopsy were analysed from the same 32 patients (some patients with >1 sample). $ Samples excluded (21 samples) due to missing renal domain-score of the SLE disease activity index.
Baseline clinical characteristics of study cohort by LN status*
| Variables | LN (n=68) | No-LN (n=47) | P value† |
| Clinical characteristics | |||
| Age, years | 17 (14.5, 20) | 18 (16, 20) | 0.3361 |
| Female | 55 (80.88%) | 41 (87.23%) | 0.3673 |
| Race | 0.2878 | ||
| White | 31 (46.97%) | 24 (52.17%) | . |
| Black | 32 (48.48%) | 17 (36.96%) | . |
| Other | 3 (4.55%) | 5 (10.87%) | . |
| Ethnicity (Hispanic) | 21 (30.88%) | 2 (4.26%) | 0.0004 |
| SBP (mm Hg) | 120 (110, 131.5) | 118 (108, 124) | 0.1102 |
| DBP (mm Hg) | 74 (63.5, 82) | 70 (61, 75) | 0.0571 |
| Use of ACEIs/ARBs | 14 (20.59%) | 0 (0%) | <0.0001 |
| Urine biomarker scores | |||
| Total RAIL score | 0.51 (−0.69, 1.6) | −0.21 (−1.69, 1.12) | 0.0277 |
| Total RAIL-Cr score | 0.68 (−0.68, 1.44) | −0.34 (−1.5, 0.96) | 0.0117 |
| Traditional cSLE measures | |||
| NIH-AI score | 4 (2, 12) | . | |
| NIH-CI score | 1 (0, 3) | . | |
| Total SLEDAI score | 13.5 (4, 22.5) | 2 (0, 4) | <0.0001 |
| Extrarenal SLEDAI score | 5.5 (2, 12) | 2 (0, 4) | <0.0001 |
| Renal SLEDAI score | 5 (0, 12) | 0 (0, 0) | <0.0001 |
*Continuous variables are demonstrated as median (25th, 75th percentile), categorical variables are demonstrated as frequency (percentage).
†P values are generated from Kruskal-Wallis test and χ2 test.
ACEI, ACE inhibitor; ARB, angiotensin receptor blocker; DBP, diastolic blood pressure; LN, lupus nephritis; NIH-AI, NIH-activity index; NIH-CI, NIH-chronicity index; RAIL, renal activity index for lupus; RAIL-Cr, RAIL standardised for urine creatinine; SBP, systolic blood pressure; SLEDAI, SLE disease activity index.
Traditional renal measures and biomarker concentrations at the time of kidney biopsy by LN activity category
| Variables* | (a) NIH-AI <2 | (b) NIH-AI 2–10 (n=12) | (c) NIH-AI >10 (n=12) | (d) No LN | (abcd) | (abc) | (a) versus (d) |
| Urine biomarkers‡ and RAIL | |||||||
| NGAL (ng/mL) | 3.19 (2.66, 3.6) | 3.89 (3, 4.48) | 3.56 (3.16, 3.78) | 3.59 (3.15, 3.88) | 0.3130 | 0.2413 | 0.2518 |
| Ceruloplasmin (ng/mL) | 8.11 (6.66, 9.5) | 9 (8.11, 9.64) | 8.62 (7.63, 9.32) | 3.76 (2.99, 4.98) | <0.0001 | 0.6420 | <0.0001 |
| MCP-1 (pg/mL) | 6.34 (5.72, 7.04) | 7.4 (6.79, 7.87) | 8.33 (7.59, 8.84) | 5.9 (4.41, 6.92) | <0.0001 | 0.0103 | 0.3518 |
| Adiponectin (ng/mL) | 4.1 (3.79, 4.51) | 4.84 (4.19, 5.89) | 6.28 (4.73, 7.1) | 4.8 (3.6, 5.69) | 0.0096 | 0.0053 | 0.1974 |
| Haemopexin (ng/mL) | 7.21 (6.64, 8.13) | 8.38 (7.4, 8.73) | 7.92 (7.54, 8.15) | 6.49 (6.03, 6.89) | <0.0001 | 0.1930 | 0.0378 |
| KIM-1 (pg/mL) | 6.8 (5.94, 7.37) | 7.79 (6.71, 8.31) | 7.75 (6.9, 8.5) | 6.27 (4.93, 7.11) | 0.0007 | 0.1866 | 0.3771 |
| Urine creatinine (mg/mL) | 0.74 (0.62, 1.48) | 0.79 (0.56, 1.15) | 1.48 (0.74, 2.5) | 1.21 (0.5, 2.07) | 0.3344 | 0.2306 | 0.4034 |
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| Traditional LN measures | |||||||
| SBP (mm Hg) | 122.5 (110, 127.5) | 125 (115, 136.5) | 122.5 (118.5, 133) | 118 (108, 124) | 0.2008 | 0.6556 | 0.5425 |
| DBP (mm Hg) | 63.5 (59.5, 77.5) | 77.5 (68, 89) | 76.5 (66.5, 87) | 70 (61, 75) | 0.1083 | 0.3301 | 0.6946 |
| eGFR | 105.5 (90, 146.5) | 97 (49, 128) | 82 (59, 133.5) | 109 (103, 130) | 0.1498 | 0.4488 | 0.5008 |
| UPCR | 1.39 (1.05, 3.79) | 4.49 (2.44, 9.21) | 2.17 (0.95, 3.83) | 0.14 (0.09, 0.23) | <0.0001 | 0.0898 | <0.0001 |
| UACR | 0.12 (0.07, 0.19) | 0.33 (0.21, 0.48) | 0.63 (0.14, 2.56) | 0.01 (0.01, 0.02) | <0.0001 | 0.0191 | <0.0001 |
| NIH-AI | 0.5 (0, 1) | 4.5 (4, 7.5) | 13.5 (12.5, 15) | – | <0.0001 | ||
| NIH-CI | 0 (0, 0) | 1.5 (0, 3) | 1 (1, 3) | – | 0.0119 | ||
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*Values are median (25th, 75th percentile).
†P values are generated from Kruskal-Wallis test.
‡Concentration of urine proteins are natural log transformed.
§Standardisation by urine creatinine.
DBP, diastolic blood pressure; eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate as per modified Schwartz formula; KIM-1, kidney injury molecule 1; LN, lupus nephritis; MCP-1, monocyte chemotactic protein 1; NGAL, neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin; NIH-AI, National Institute of Health activity index; NIH-CI, National Institute of Health chronicity index; SBP, systolic blood pressure; UACR, albumin-to-creatinine ratio; UPCR, urine protein-to-creatinine ratio.
Figure 2The renal activity index for lupus (RAIL) and RAIL standardised for urine creatinine (RAIL-Cr) scores are superior in capturing high lupus nephritis (LN) activity. A receiver operating curve demonstrating the performance of the RAIL score (red solid line), RAIL-Cr (blue dotted line) and SLE disease activity index (rSLEDAI) score (green dashed line) in identifying patients with high activity LN (National Institute of Health-activity index >10) among 32 patients with active LN. The areas under the curves (AUC) are annotated for each score in the right lower corner.
Figure 3Renal activity index for lupus (RAIL) and RAIL standardised for urine creatinine (RAIL-Cr) scores above two correlate with high activity lupus nephritis (LN). Distribution of the RAIL and RAIL-Cr score (x-axis) represented by red and blue liner regression lines and 95% confidence limits, respectively, against the available range of National Institute of Health-activity index (NIH-AI) scores (y-axis) in 32 patients with active LN. Each NIH-AI score by RAIL (red circle) and RAIL-Cr scores (blue cross) is marked in the figure. The relationship between NIH-AI and two RAIL scores are presented in liner regression lines with 95% confidence limits (RAIL in red line and RAIL-Cr in blue line). Grey dash lines (NIH-AI=2 and 10) are reference cut points for inactive, low-moderate and high LN activity.
Figure 4Distribution of renal activity index for lupus (RAIL) (A) and RAIL standardised for urine creatinine (RAIL-Cr) (B) scores in relation to SLE disease activity index (rSLEDAI) scores from 246 samples from patients collected >3 months before/after kidney biopsy. Box-Whisker plots of RAIL score (y-axis, A) or RAIL-Cr (y-axis, B) by rSLEDAI (x-axis) in patients with lupus nephritis (LN) (red colour) and no-LN (blue colour), where medians, IQR, maximum, minimum and outliers are shown. The number of urine samples (N%) for each box is outlined above the x-axis along with the percentage out of a total of 151 LN samples and 95 no-LN samples. Based on data in figure 3, the grey dash lines indicate the RAIL scores corresponding to NIH-AI of 2 and 10.