Cargando…

Rates of Serious Intracellular Infections in Autoimmune Disease Patients Receiving Initial Glucocorticoid Therapy

BACKGROUND/AIMS: The Japanese National Hospital Organization evidence-based medicine (EBM) Study group for Adverse effects of Corticosteroid therapy (J-NHOSAC) is a Japanese hospital-based cohort study investigating the safety of the initial use of glucocorticoids (GCs) in patients with newly diagno...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Migita, Kiyoshi, Arai, Toru, Ishizuka, Naoki, Jiuchi, Yuka, Sasaki, Yasuharu, Izumi, Yasumori, Kiyokawa, Tetsuyuki, Suematsu, Eiichi, Miyamura, Tomoya, Tsutani, Hiroshi, Kawabe, Yojiro, Matsumura, Ryutaro, Mori, Shunsuke, Ohshima, Shiro, Yoshizawa, Shigeru, Kawakami, Kenji, Suenaga, Yasuo, Nishimura, Hideo, Sugimoto, Toyohiko, Iwase, Hiroaki, Sawada, Hideyuki, Yamashita, Haruhiro, Kuratsu, Shigeyuki, Ogushi, Fumitaka, Kawabata, Masaharu, Matsui, Toshihiro, Furukawa, Hiroshi, Bito, Seiji, Tohma, Shigeto
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3834005/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24260127
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0078699
_version_ 1782291925144961024
author Migita, Kiyoshi
Arai, Toru
Ishizuka, Naoki
Jiuchi, Yuka
Sasaki, Yasuharu
Izumi, Yasumori
Kiyokawa, Tetsuyuki
Suematsu, Eiichi
Miyamura, Tomoya
Tsutani, Hiroshi
Kawabe, Yojiro
Matsumura, Ryutaro
Mori, Shunsuke
Ohshima, Shiro
Yoshizawa, Shigeru
Kawakami, Kenji
Suenaga, Yasuo
Nishimura, Hideo
Sugimoto, Toyohiko
Iwase, Hiroaki
Sawada, Hideyuki
Yamashita, Haruhiro
Kuratsu, Shigeyuki
Ogushi, Fumitaka
Kawabata, Masaharu
Matsui, Toshihiro
Furukawa, Hiroshi
Bito, Seiji
Tohma, Shigeto
author_facet Migita, Kiyoshi
Arai, Toru
Ishizuka, Naoki
Jiuchi, Yuka
Sasaki, Yasuharu
Izumi, Yasumori
Kiyokawa, Tetsuyuki
Suematsu, Eiichi
Miyamura, Tomoya
Tsutani, Hiroshi
Kawabe, Yojiro
Matsumura, Ryutaro
Mori, Shunsuke
Ohshima, Shiro
Yoshizawa, Shigeru
Kawakami, Kenji
Suenaga, Yasuo
Nishimura, Hideo
Sugimoto, Toyohiko
Iwase, Hiroaki
Sawada, Hideyuki
Yamashita, Haruhiro
Kuratsu, Shigeyuki
Ogushi, Fumitaka
Kawabata, Masaharu
Matsui, Toshihiro
Furukawa, Hiroshi
Bito, Seiji
Tohma, Shigeto
author_sort Migita, Kiyoshi
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND/AIMS: The Japanese National Hospital Organization evidence-based medicine (EBM) Study group for Adverse effects of Corticosteroid therapy (J-NHOSAC) is a Japanese hospital-based cohort study investigating the safety of the initial use of glucocorticoids (GCs) in patients with newly diagnosed autoimmune diseases. Using the J-NHOSAC registry, the purpose of this observational study is to analyse the rates, characteristics and associated risk factors of intracellular infections in patients with newly diagnosed autoimmune diseases who were initially treated with GCs. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: A total 604 patients with newly diagnosed autoimmune diseases treated with GCs were enrolled in this registry between April 2007 and March 2009. Cox proportional-hazards regression was used to determine independent risk factors for serious intracellular infections with covariates including sex, age, co-morbidity, laboratory data, use of immunosuppressants and dose of GCs. Survival was analysed according to the Kaplan-Meier method and was assessed by the log-rank test. There were 127 serious infections, including 43 intracellular infections, during 1105.8 patient-years of follow-up. The 43 serious intracellular infections resulted in 8 deaths. After adjustment for covariates, diabetes (Odds ratio [OR]: 2.5, 95% confidence interval [95% CI] 1.1–5.9), lymphocytopenia (≦1000/μl, OR: 2.5, 95% CI 1.2–5.2) and use of high-dose (≧30 mg/day) GCs (OR: 2.4, 95% CI 1.1–5.3) increased the risk of intracellular infections. Survival curves showed lower intracellular infection-free survival rate in patients with diabetes, lymphocytopaenia and high-dose GCs treatments. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Patients with newly diagnosed autoimmune diseases were at high risk of developing intracellular infection during initial treatment with GCs. Our findings provide background data on the risk of intracellular infections of patients with autoimmune diseases. Clinicians showed remain vigilant for intracellular infections in patients with autoimmune diseases who are treated with GCs.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3834005
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-38340052013-11-20 Rates of Serious Intracellular Infections in Autoimmune Disease Patients Receiving Initial Glucocorticoid Therapy Migita, Kiyoshi Arai, Toru Ishizuka, Naoki Jiuchi, Yuka Sasaki, Yasuharu Izumi, Yasumori Kiyokawa, Tetsuyuki Suematsu, Eiichi Miyamura, Tomoya Tsutani, Hiroshi Kawabe, Yojiro Matsumura, Ryutaro Mori, Shunsuke Ohshima, Shiro Yoshizawa, Shigeru Kawakami, Kenji Suenaga, Yasuo Nishimura, Hideo Sugimoto, Toyohiko Iwase, Hiroaki Sawada, Hideyuki Yamashita, Haruhiro Kuratsu, Shigeyuki Ogushi, Fumitaka Kawabata, Masaharu Matsui, Toshihiro Furukawa, Hiroshi Bito, Seiji Tohma, Shigeto PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND/AIMS: The Japanese National Hospital Organization evidence-based medicine (EBM) Study group for Adverse effects of Corticosteroid therapy (J-NHOSAC) is a Japanese hospital-based cohort study investigating the safety of the initial use of glucocorticoids (GCs) in patients with newly diagnosed autoimmune diseases. Using the J-NHOSAC registry, the purpose of this observational study is to analyse the rates, characteristics and associated risk factors of intracellular infections in patients with newly diagnosed autoimmune diseases who were initially treated with GCs. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: A total 604 patients with newly diagnosed autoimmune diseases treated with GCs were enrolled in this registry between April 2007 and March 2009. Cox proportional-hazards regression was used to determine independent risk factors for serious intracellular infections with covariates including sex, age, co-morbidity, laboratory data, use of immunosuppressants and dose of GCs. Survival was analysed according to the Kaplan-Meier method and was assessed by the log-rank test. There were 127 serious infections, including 43 intracellular infections, during 1105.8 patient-years of follow-up. The 43 serious intracellular infections resulted in 8 deaths. After adjustment for covariates, diabetes (Odds ratio [OR]: 2.5, 95% confidence interval [95% CI] 1.1–5.9), lymphocytopenia (≦1000/μl, OR: 2.5, 95% CI 1.2–5.2) and use of high-dose (≧30 mg/day) GCs (OR: 2.4, 95% CI 1.1–5.3) increased the risk of intracellular infections. Survival curves showed lower intracellular infection-free survival rate in patients with diabetes, lymphocytopaenia and high-dose GCs treatments. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Patients with newly diagnosed autoimmune diseases were at high risk of developing intracellular infection during initial treatment with GCs. Our findings provide background data on the risk of intracellular infections of patients with autoimmune diseases. Clinicians showed remain vigilant for intracellular infections in patients with autoimmune diseases who are treated with GCs. Public Library of Science 2013-11-19 /pmc/articles/PMC3834005/ /pubmed/24260127 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0078699 Text en © 2013 Migita et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Migita, Kiyoshi
Arai, Toru
Ishizuka, Naoki
Jiuchi, Yuka
Sasaki, Yasuharu
Izumi, Yasumori
Kiyokawa, Tetsuyuki
Suematsu, Eiichi
Miyamura, Tomoya
Tsutani, Hiroshi
Kawabe, Yojiro
Matsumura, Ryutaro
Mori, Shunsuke
Ohshima, Shiro
Yoshizawa, Shigeru
Kawakami, Kenji
Suenaga, Yasuo
Nishimura, Hideo
Sugimoto, Toyohiko
Iwase, Hiroaki
Sawada, Hideyuki
Yamashita, Haruhiro
Kuratsu, Shigeyuki
Ogushi, Fumitaka
Kawabata, Masaharu
Matsui, Toshihiro
Furukawa, Hiroshi
Bito, Seiji
Tohma, Shigeto
Rates of Serious Intracellular Infections in Autoimmune Disease Patients Receiving Initial Glucocorticoid Therapy
title Rates of Serious Intracellular Infections in Autoimmune Disease Patients Receiving Initial Glucocorticoid Therapy
title_full Rates of Serious Intracellular Infections in Autoimmune Disease Patients Receiving Initial Glucocorticoid Therapy
title_fullStr Rates of Serious Intracellular Infections in Autoimmune Disease Patients Receiving Initial Glucocorticoid Therapy
title_full_unstemmed Rates of Serious Intracellular Infections in Autoimmune Disease Patients Receiving Initial Glucocorticoid Therapy
title_short Rates of Serious Intracellular Infections in Autoimmune Disease Patients Receiving Initial Glucocorticoid Therapy
title_sort rates of serious intracellular infections in autoimmune disease patients receiving initial glucocorticoid therapy
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3834005/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24260127
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0078699
work_keys_str_mv AT migitakiyoshi ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT araitoru ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT ishizukanaoki ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT jiuchiyuka ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT sasakiyasuharu ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT izumiyasumori ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT kiyokawatetsuyuki ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT suematsueiichi ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT miyamuratomoya ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT tsutanihiroshi ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT kawabeyojiro ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT matsumuraryutaro ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT morishunsuke ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT ohshimashiro ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT yoshizawashigeru ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT kawakamikenji ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT suenagayasuo ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT nishimurahideo ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT sugimototoyohiko ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT iwasehiroaki ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT sawadahideyuki ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT yamashitaharuhiro ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT kuratsushigeyuki ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT ogushifumitaka ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT kawabatamasaharu ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT matsuitoshihiro ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT furukawahiroshi ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT bitoseiji ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy
AT tohmashigeto ratesofseriousintracellularinfectionsinautoimmunediseasepatientsreceivinginitialglucocorticoidtherapy