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Journal ArticleDOI

Wegener granulomatosis : an analysis of 158 patients

TLDR
The course of Wegener granulomatosis has been dramatically improved by daily treatment with cyclophosphamide and glucocorticoids, and has led to increasing concerns about toxicity resulting from prolonged cycloph phosphamide therapy and has encouraged investigation of other therapeutic regimens.
Abstract
Objective To prospectively study the clinical features, pathophysiology, treatment and prognosis of Wegener granulomatosis. Design Of the 180 patients with Wegener granulomatosis referred to the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases during the past 24 years, 158 have been followed for 6 months to 24 years (a total of 1229 patient-years). Measurements Characteristics of clinical presentation, surgical pathology, course of illness, laboratory and radiographic findings, and the results of medical and surgical treatment have been recorded in a computer-based information retrieval system. Setting The Warren Magnuson Clinical Center of the National Institutes of Health. Main results Men and women were equally represented; 97% of patients were white, and 85% were more than 19 years of age. The mean period of follow-up was 8 years. One hundred and thirty-three patients (84%) received "standard" therapy with daily low-dose cyclophosphamide and glucocorticoids. Eight (5.0%) received only low-dose cyclophosphamide. Six (4.0%) never received cyclophosphamide and were treated with other cytotoxic agents and glucocorticoids. Ten patients (6.0%) were treated with only glucocorticoids. Ninety-one percent of patients experienced marked improvement, and 75% achieved complete remission. Fifty percent of remissions were associated with one or more relapses. Of 99 patients followed for greater than 5 years, 44% had remissions of greater than 5 years duration. Thirteen percent of patients died of Wegener granulomatosis, treatment-related causes, or both. Almost all patients had serious morbidity from irreversible features of their disease (86%) or side effects of treatment (42%). Conclusions The course of Wegener granulomatosis has been dramatically improved by daily treatment with cyclophosphamide and glucocorticoids. Nonetheless, disease- and treatment-related morbidity is often profound. Alternative forms of therapy have not yet achieved the high rates of remission induction and successful maintenance that have been reported with daily cyclophosphamide treatment. Despite continued therapeutic success with cyclophosphamide, our long-term follow-up of patients with Wegener granulomatosis has led to increasing concerns about toxicity resulting from prolonged cyclophosphamide therapy and has encouraged investigation of other therapeutic regimens.

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Citations
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Severe Adverse Cutaneous Reactions to Drugs

TL;DR: Adverse cutaneous reactions to drugs are frequent, affecting 2 to 3 percent of hospitalized patients, and prompt withdrawal of the offending drug is often the most important action to minimize morbidity.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Randomized Trial of Maintenance Therapy for Vasculitis Associated with Antineutrophil Cytoplasmic Autoantibodies

TL;DR: In patients with generalized vasculitis, the withdrawal of cyclophosphamide and the substitution of azathioprine after remission did not increase the rate of relapse, suggesting the duration of exposure to cycloph phosphamide may be safely reduced.
Journal ArticleDOI

Small-Vessel Vasculitis

TL;DR: Protean clinical manifestations, combined with the etiologic nonspecificity of the histologic lesions, complicate the diagnosis of specific forms of vasculitis.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Wegener's granulomatosis: Prospective clinical and therapeutic experience with 85 patients for 21 years

TL;DR: It is shown that long-term remissions can be induced and maintained in an extremely high number of patients by the combination of daily cyclophosphamide and alternate-day prednisone therapy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Autoantibodies against neutrophils and monocytes: tool for diagnosis and marker of disease activity in wegener's granulomatosis

TL;DR: Immunoglobulin G (IgG) autoantibodies against extranuclear components of polymorphonuclear granulocytes were detected in 25 of 27 serum samples from patients with active Wegener's granulomatosis and in only 4 of 32 samples from Patients without signs of disease activity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies induce neutrophils to degranulate and produce oxygen radicals in vitro.

TL;DR: It is proposed that, in patients with necrotizing vasculitis, ANCA-induced release of toxic oxygen radicals and noxious granule enzymes from cytokine-primed neutrophils could be mediating vascular inflammation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Therapy of lupus nephritis. Controlled trial of prednisone and cytotoxic drugs.

TL;DR: It is concluded that, as compared with high-dose oral prednisone alone, treatment of lupus glomerulonephritis with intravenous cyclophosphamide reduces the risk of end-stage renal failure with few serious complications.
Journal ArticleDOI

Giant-cell granuloma of the respiratory tract (Wegener's granulomatosis)

E. W. Walton
- 02 Aug 1958 - 
TL;DR: Kim, K. S., Bollman, J. L., and Odndlay,J.
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