Persisting mortality gap in systemic lupus erythematosus; a population-based study on juvenile- and adult-onset SLE in Norway 1999-2022
Reppe Moe, Sigrid; Haukeland, Hilde; Brunborg, Cathrine; Botea, Antonela; Damjanic, Nenad; Wivestad, Gro Årthun; Øvreås, Heidi Kverneggen; Bøe, Thea Bjerkestrand; Orre, Anniken; Garen, Torhild Oddveig; Lilleby, Vibke; Provan, Sella Aarrestad; Molberg, Øyvind; Lerang, Karoline
Peer reviewed, Journal article
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Date
2023Metadata
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Abstract
Objective: To estimate mortality and survival rates of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) in a contemporary, population-based setting and assess potential influences by time, sex, ethnicity, classification criteria and age at diagnosis. Methods: We assessed mortality and survival in the Nor-SLE cohort, which includes all chart-review confirmed SLE cases resident in Southeast Norway (population 2.9 million) 1999-2017. Study end was at death, emigration, or 1 October 2022. We defined juvenile SLE by age <16 years at diagnosis. For standardized mortality rate (SMR) estimates, we applied 15 population controls per case, all matched for age, sex, residency, and ethnicity. We analyzed survival by Kaplan-Meier and risk factors by cox regression. Results: The Nor-SLE cohort included 1558 SLE cases, of whom 749 were incident and met the 2019 European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology and American College of Rheumatology (2019-EA) classification criteria. SMR was increased to 1.8 (95% CI 1.6-2.2) in incident adult-onset SLE but did not differ between females and males. Survival rates at 5-, 10-, 15 and 20-years were lower in incident adult-onset SLE than in matched controls. In multivariable analysis, lupus nephritis associated with decreased survival, while sex did not. Separate, long-term mortality analyses in the total Nor-SLE cohort showed that SMR peaked at 7.2 (95% CI 3.3-14) in juvenile-onset SLE (n = 93) and fell gradually by increasing age at SLE diagnosis. Conclusion: This study shows persistence of a mortality gap between adult-onset SLE and controls at population level and provides indications of worryingly high mortality in juvenile-onset SLE.