Advertisement
Annals
Established in 1927 by the American College of Physicians
:
Advanced search

Rapid Responses to:

Articles:
Susan L. Hogan, Ronald J. Falk, Hyunsook Chin, Jianwen Cai, Caroline E. Jennette, J. Charles Jennette, and Patrick H. Nachman
Predictors of Relapse and Treatment Resistance in Antineutrophil Cytoplasmic Antibody–Associated Small-Vessel Vasculitis
Ann Intern Med 2005; 143: 621-631 [Abstract] [Full text] [PDF]
*Send comment/rapid response letter

Electronic letters published:

[Read Rapid Response] ANCA-PR3, or ANCA-MPO
seongjae choi   (16 December 2005)
[Read Rapid Response] Treatment Resistance in Antineutrophil Cytoplasmic Antibody–Associated Small-Vessel Vasculitis
Dr Shamsul A Bhuiyan, Dr.Carlos Javier Mencias Vera (MD), Dr Shahabuddin Haq (MBBS)   (10 November 2005)
[Read Rapid Response] TNF-alpha blocking agents in the treatment of ANCA-Associated Small-Vesse Vasculitis
Francisco R. Lafita, Belinda Garcia MD   (7 November 2005)

ANCA-PR3, or ANCA-MPO 16 December 2005
Previous Rapid Response  Top
seongjae choi,
M.D
Korea University guro hospital

Send rapid response to journal:
Re: ANCA-PR3, or ANCA-MPO

csjmd{at}hotmail.com seongjae choi

all the way, the ANCA-PR3 is important for the relapse (RR=1.87). But in the end of the left paragraph on page 628, the MPO-seropositivity was associated with treatment resistance. which one is right? is this just a typing error?

Conflict of Interest:

None declared

Treatment Resistance in Antineutrophil Cytoplasmic Antibody–Associated Small-Vessel Vasculitis 10 November 2005
Previous Rapid Response Next Rapid Response Top
Dr Shamsul A Bhuiyan,
MD ,
Dr.Carlos Javier Mencias Vera (MD), Dr Shahabuddin Haq (MBBS)

Send rapid response to journal:
Re: Treatment Resistance in Antineutrophil Cytoplasmic Antibody–Associated Small-Vessel Vasculitis

drshamsul44{at}yahoo.com Dr Shamsul A Bhuiyan, et al.

Dear editor,

I am writing this letter regarding the article by Susan L. Hogan et al published in your journal “Predictors of Relapse and Treatment Resistance in Antineutrophil Cytoplasmic Antibody–Associated Small-Vessel Vasculitis ”(November 1, 2005). I would like to add some more information to this article. Specific enzyme immunoassays for antibodies to proteinase-3 or myeloperoxidase (the 2 antigens known to be associated with systemic vasculitis) are negative in classic PAN (where no lungs involvement seen). Positive enzyme immunoassays for antibodies to these specific antigens are much more consistent with Wegener granulomatosis, microscopic polyangiitis, or the Churg-Strauss syndrome. Classic PAN is p- ANCA positive, on the other hand others are c-ANCA positive. Systemic vasculitidies is seen (1) mainly now a days. Classic form of PAN (polyarteritis nodosa) is rarely seen. PAN appears to affect men and women with approximately equal frequencies and to occur in all ethnic groups. This study would be more valuable if they could include all ethnic groups, both male and female. The weak area of this study is that they did not subdivide the people among male/female, absence of different ethnicity people, age determination. If they could mentioned how many patients were classic polyarteritis Nodosa patients and how many of them had systemic vasculitis, would be more useful. This article showed only the kidney and lungs involvement. Intraparenchymal renal inflammation is a major feature of PAN, found in 40% of patients (2) The gastrointestinal manifestations of PAN occur in approximately half of all patients (2). There was no information regarding this major disease affect and treatment follow-up. The new findings of “Increased risk for relapse appears to be related to the presence of lung or upper airway disease and anti-PR3 antibody seropositivity” is really encouraging and needs more research.

Reference: 1. John H. Stone, Polyarteritis Nodosa JAMA, Oct 2002; 288: 1632 - 1639. 2. Guillevin L. Polyarteritis nodosa and microscopic polyangiitis. In: Ball GV, Bridges SL Jr, eds. Vasculitis. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press; 2002:300-320.

Conflict of Interest:

None declared

TNF-alpha blocking agents in the treatment of ANCA-Associated Small-Vesse Vasculitis 7 November 2005
 Next Rapid Response Top
Francisco R. Lafita,
MD, PhD, FACP
Gabinet Mèdic. 43850 Cambrils.Baix Camp. Spain,
Belinda Garcia MD

Send rapid response to journal:
Re: TNF-alpha blocking agents in the treatment of ANCA-Associated Small-Vesse Vasculitis

frlafita{at}comt.org Francisco R. Lafita, et al.

Hogan and coworkers thoughtful cohort study (1) points out some interesting conclusions on prediction of relapse and treatment resistance in Antineutrophil Cytoplasmic Antibody-Associated Small-Vessel Vasculitis. In addition, as we observe these results it seems interesting to underlie that 23% of patients who underwent to therapy with corticosteroids and cyclophosphamide showed resistance to the treatment and those who were initially responders to the treatment, 42% presented a relapse. That means that 55% of patients treated with conventional therapy showed treatment resistance or presented disease relapse. Moreover and according the authors, relapses were not related to the therapy length. In the last years there have appeared many publications on the usefulness of TNF-alpha blocking agents in Systemic Vasculitis (2) and specifically in refractory Wegener Granulomatosis (3). Beside the results found in some studies where Etanercept failed to maintain remissions in patients with Wegnener granulomatosis (4), there are many others (3, 5) suggesting that TNF-alpha inhibition constitutes a promising treatment in refractory Wegener granulomatosis. Indeed, studies have shown expansion of circulating TNF-alpha producing cells (Th1-type CD4(+)CD28(-) T-cell effector memory T-cells ) and their presence in granulomatous lesions (5). This fact would provide a rationale for treating patients with Wegener granulomatosis with TNF-alpha blocking agents. This is especially important in patients who undergoing conventional therapy, were found to show treatment resistance, or to be at risk of resistance, given the scarce probability to survive without end-stage kidney disease and its early presentation as authors describe in their results and in figure 2 in the paper. This thrilling paper should be continued on introducing therapies with TNF -alpha blocking agents mainly in patients found to be resistant to conventional therapies and in those who presented risk of resistances.

1. Hogan SL, Falk RJ, Chin H, Cai J, Jennette CE, Jennette JC, Nachman PH. Predictors of relapse and treatment resistance in antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody-associated small-vessel vasculitis. Ann Intern Med. 2005 ;143:621-31. 2. Booth AD, Jayne DR, Kharbanda RK, McEniery CM, Mackenzie IS, Brown J, Wilkinson IB. Infliximab improves endothelial dysfunction in systemic vasculitis: a model of vascular inflammation. Circulation. 2004;109):1718- 23. 3. Kleinert J, Lorenz M, Kostler W, Horl W, Sunder-Plassmann G, Soleiman A. . Refractory Wegener's granulomatosis responds to tumor necrosis factor blockade. Wien Klin Wochenschr. 2004;116:334-8. 4. Wegener's Granulomatosis Etanercept Trial (WGET) Research Group. Etanercept plus standard therapy for Wegener's granulomatosis. N Engl J Med. 2005;352:351-61 5. Lamprecht P, Gross WL. Wegener's granulomatosis. Herz. 2004;29:47-56.

Conflict of Interest:

None declared


 Home | Current Issue | Past Issues | In the Clinic | ACP Journal Club | CME | Collections | Audio/Video | Mobile | Subscribe | Tools | Help | ACP Online 

Copyright © 2008 by the American College of Physicians.