Détail du document
Identifiant

oai:pubmedcentral.nih.gov:1110...

Sujet
Original Research
Auteur
Niu, Jingwen Zhang, Lei Hu, Nan Cui, Liying Liu, Mingsheng
Langue
en
Editeur

BMJ Publishing Group

Catégorie

BMJ Neurology Open

Année

2024

Date de référencement

11/06/2024

Mots clés
long-term patients incat treatment cidp relapse
Métrique

Résumé

OBJECTIVE: We aim to describe the long-term outcome of chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (CIDP) after immune treatment in a Chinese cohort.

METHODS: Between March 2015 and March 2023, 89 patients fulfilling the criteria for CIDP were followed up for a median of 22 months after treatment.

Nine had positive antibodies against nodal-paranodal cell-adhesion molecules.

Patients were treated according to clinical requirements with prednisone, intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg) and/or immunosuppressant.

RESULTS: A total of 78/89 patients had decreased inflammatory neuropathy cause and treatment (INCAT) scores at the last follow-up.

For CIDP patients treated with steroids, 35 were stable without relapse after cessation or with a small maintenance dose; 2 relapsed at a high dose (20 mg/day); 15 relapsed at a low dosage (<20 mg/day) and 11 did not respond.

The INCAT before treatment was significantly lower in those without relapse (median INCAT 2 vs 3, p=0.030).

IVIg was effective in 37/52 CIDP patients.

28 CIDP patients and 4 autoimmune nodopathy patients were treated with immunosuppressants.

The average INCAT was 3.3±1.9 before and 1.9±1.3 after immunosuppressant treatment (p=0.001) in CIDP.

CONCLUSION: The long-term prognosis of CIDP patients was generally favourable.

Nearly half of our patients treated with steroid were stable without relapse after cessation or with a small maintenance dose.

The risk of relapse was higher in those with high INCAT.

We recommend slowly tapering prednisone based on clinical judgement.

Niu, Jingwen,Zhang, Lei,Hu, Nan,Cui, Liying,Liu, Mingsheng, 2024, Long-term follow-up of relapse and remission of CIDP in a Chinese cohort, BMJ Publishing Group

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