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  • Title: Methylprednisolone and cyclophosphamide pulse therapy in crescentic glomerulonephritis: safety and effectiveness.
    Author: Rondeau E, Kourilsky O, Peraldi MN, Alberti C, Kanfer A, Sraer JD.
    Journal: Ren Fail; 1993; 15(4):495-501. PubMed ID: 8210561.
    Abstract:
    In a previous study, we found that aggressive immunosuppressive therapy with continuous high-dose oral steroid and cyclophosphamide combined with plasma exchanges for extracapillary crescentic glomerulonephritis gave controversial results since, although disease activity was controlled, iatrogenic complications had led to death in some aged patients. We then modified our therapeutic regimen, and we analyze here the evolution of 30 consecutive patients who were admitted for biopsy-proven crescentic glomerulonephritis between 1989 and 1991. The mean plasma creatinine level at admission was 393 +/- 59 mumol/L (range 70 to 1100), and 15 patients had crescent formation in more than 50% of glomeruli on initial renal biopsy. Ten patients did not receive any immunosuppressive treatment since they either had a normal renal function or they had terminal renal failure and no severe extrarenal manifestation. The 20 other patients received initial steroid pulses 500 mg x3 (n = 17), low oral steroid treatment (n = 20), cyclophosphamide pulses (n = 13), or oral cyclophosphamide (n = 3). In 4 cases plasma exchanges were also used. As a whole, 10 patients (33%) were discharged with a normal renal function, and 18 patients (60%) had chronic renal failure, 7 of them requiring dialysis or transplantation; only 2 patients died of pulmonary hemorrhage. No severe iatrogenic complication was observed. These results indicate that reduction in oral steroid dosage, cyclophosphamide pulse therapy rather than continuous oral treatment, and plasma exchanges do not induce overimmunosuppression and iatrogenic complication. It can be safe, well tolerated, and as effective as a more intensive immunosuppressive regimen for the treatment of crescentic extracapillary glomerulonephritis.
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