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Clinicopathological characteristics of lupus nephritis in Western region of Saudi Arabia: An experience from two tertiary medical centres
Author(s) -
Wafaey Gomaa,
Sami M. Bahlas,
Wael Habhab,
Maimoona Mushtaq,
Saeed Alghamdi,
Jaudah AlMaghrabi
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of microscopy and ultrastructure
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2213-8803
pISSN - 2213-879X
DOI - 10.1016/j.jmau.2014.02.001
Subject(s) - lupus nephritis , medicine , systemic lupus erythematosus , population , gastroenterology , disease , environmental health
BackgroundWe present the clinicopathological characteristics of lupus nephritis (LN) in a subset of population from Western Saudi Arabia.Materials and methodsWe retrospectively analysed previously diagnosed 148 renal biopsies in cases with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) from two medical centres. Microscopic slides from these patients were retrieved and re-assessed according to the WHO and ISN/RPS classifications by histological, immunological and electron microscopic items. Clinical and laboratory findings were retrieved from patients’ medical records.ResultsMedian age of patients years is 24 (range: 2–65), females (85.1%), and males (14.9%). The frequency of cases in each class according to WHO classification and ISN/RPS classification was nearly the same and was as follows: class I (0%), class II (12.8%), class III (8.8%), class IV (51.4%), class V (23%), and class VI (4%). For IV class, IV-G (41.9%) subcategory was higher than IV-S (9.4%). Immunofluorescence examination revealed positive staining for IgG and C3 in 98.4% and 97.6% of cases respectively. In conclusion, class IV (51.4%) is the predominant class, followed by class V (23%).ConclusionThere are differences in clinicopathological data reported from this study with other studies. Continuous reporting from different national specialised nephrology centres is recommended for better elucidation of the natural history of lupus nephritis in Saudi patients

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