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Articles tagged with "systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)"

Clinical Challenges in SLE: Glucocorticoids—How Much Is Too Much?

Samantha C. Shapiro, MD  |  July 22, 2022

Glucocorticoids remain a prominent part of care for many patients with SLE but can have toxic side effects; this EULAR 2022 session discussed one institution’s approach to lower the dosage.

Difficult-to-Treat Lupus: When & How to Use New Therapies

Samantha C. Shapiro, MD  |  July 21, 2022

Clinicians have numerous treatment options for SLE; in a EULAR 2022 session, some of the newer therapies were reviewed.

Never Too Late: Late-Breaking Abstracts Create Excitement

Jason Liebowitz, MD, FACR  |  July 15, 2022

EULAR 2022 (VIRTUAL)—The pace of scientific progress in research medicine is incredible and seems to only accelerate with time. Thus, the 2022 Congress of the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology (EULAR) session on late-breaking abstracts fittingly captured the excitement and timeliness of a number of research projects that have just recently been completed and…

Anifrolumab Promising for Sustained Low Disease Activity in Patients with Lupus

Michele B. Kaufman, PharmD, BCGP  |  May 5, 2022

ACR CONVERGENCE 2021—Using pooled data from the TULIP-1 and TULIP-2 clinical trials, researchers set out to identify whether more patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) being treated with anifrolumab achieved a low disease activity state than patients with SLE who received placebo.1-3 An analysis of the data was presented at ACR Convergence 2021 by Eric…

HCQ/CQ May Increase the Risk of Cardiovascular Events

Arthritis & Rheumatology  |  December 1, 2021

A special article in the December issue of Arthritis & Rheumatology summarizes the current understanding of the cardiac toxicity of HCQ and CQ.

Using the 2019 EULAR/ACR Classification Criteria to Predict Disease Severity in SLE

Lara C. Pullen, PhD  |  November 30, 2021

Predicting a patient’s disease course is difficult, especially in SLE. A recent study examined the link between a patient’s 2019 EULAR/ACR SLE Classification Criteria score at diagnosis to subsequent disease severity, finding a score of 20 or more may predict a more severe disease course.

How Pediatric Rheumatologists Are Moving Lupus Research Forward

Elizabeth Sloan, MD  |  November 23, 2021

In the 2021 Edmund L. Dubois, MD, Memorial Lectureship, Aimee Hersh, MD, discussed her work on defining research priorities in pediatric lupus.

Updates in Pediatric Lupus: Experts Discuss Advances in Lupus Nephritis Treatments, Monogenic Lupus & More

Elizabeth Sloan, MD  |  August 31, 2021

PRSYM—At the 2021 Pediatric Rheumatology Symposium (PRSYM), a session on lupus provided a robust discussion of recent advances in lupus treatments and genetic discoveries in pediatric rheumatology. Lupus Nephritis The first speaker was Shaun Jackson, MD, PhD, a pediatric nephrologist and rheumatologist and associate professor at Seattle Children’s. His presentation focused on state-of-the-art treatments in…

Rare Disease Sheds Light on the Origins of Lupus

Lara C. Pullen, PhD  |  July 12, 2021

Patients with the rare DNASE1L3 biallelic null mutation present with childhood-onset disease that resembles lupus. This observation prompted research into how abnormalities in the enzyme DNASE1L3 are associated with lupus, with researchers finding autoantibody-mediated impairment of DNASE1L3 activity may be a common non-genetic mechanism leads to anti-dsDNA autoreactivity in SLE.

New Insights into CD8+ T Cells & Lupus

Lara C. Pullen, PhD  |  July 6, 2021

A recent study demonstrated that exposure to type I interferon contributes to the pathogenesis of SLE via the metabolic rewiring of CD8+ T cells, which promotes cell death.

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