Association of initial prednisolone dose with remission, relapse, and infectious complications in adult-onset minimal change disease

Author:

Tanabe Kaori,Samejima Ken-ichiORCID,Fukata Fumihiro,Kosugi Takaaki,Tsushima Hideo,Morimoto Katsuhiko,Okamoto Keisuke,Matsui Masaru,Eriguchi Masahiro,Maruyama Naoki,Akai Yasuhiro,Tsuruya Kazuhiko

Abstract

Abstract Background A dose of 0.5–1 mg/kg/day of prednisolone (PSL) is administered for the initial treatment of minimal change disease (MCD). However, little is known about the optimal PSL dose for the initial treatment of MCD. Methods We conducted a retrospective multicenter cohort study of treatment-naive adult patients with MCD diagnosed by renal biopsy from 1981 to 2015 in whom PSL monotherapy was performed as the initial treatment. The exposure of interest was an initial median PSL dose of < 0.63 mg/kg/day (Group L) compared to ≥ 0.63 mg/kg/day (Group H). Cumulative remission and relapse after remission were compared between these groups using Cox regression adjusted for baseline characteristics. Results Ninety-one patients met the inclusion criteria. During a median follow-up of 2.98 years, 87 (95.6%) patients achieved complete remission, and 47.1% relapsed after remission. There was no significant difference in the remission rate between the groups at 4 weeks of follow-up (66.7 vs. 82.6%). The median time to remission in Group L was comparable to that in Group H (17.0 vs. 14.0 days). A multivariable Cox hazard model revealed that the initial PSL dose was not a significant predictor of remission. The cumulative steroid doses at 6 months, 1 year, and 2 years after treatment initiation were significantly lower in Group L than in Group H. Conclusion The initial PSL dose was not associated with time to remission, remission rate, time to relapse, or relapse rate. Therefore, a low initial steroid dose may be sufficient to achieve remission.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Physiology (medical),Nephrology,Physiology

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