Simultaneous immunologic studies of skin and kidney in systemic lupus erythematosus

1979 
Thirty-two biopsies of kidneys and of normal skin were performed simultaneously on patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) to determine whether the deposition of immune reactants in skin was correlated with the severity of renal injury or with several serologic measures of systemic disease activity. Immunofluorescent deposits at the dermal-epidermal junction (lupus band test) did not correlate with any clinical or histologic measures of glomerulonephritis or with serologic abnormalities. Immune deposits in dermal venules were found in 56% of the skin biopsies and were correlated with hypocomplementemia and higher levels of immune complexes in serum, and possibly with glomerular subendothelial electron dense deposits. Azathioprine therapy was correlated with absence of both subepidermal and vascular immune deposits. Immunofluorescent findings on serial skin biopsies on 13 patients were highly inconsistent. It is concluded that the lupus band test is clinically useful only as a diagnostic aid but not helpful in assessing renal or serologic activity of lupus, and that dermal vascular deposits of immunoglobulin or complement are more frequent than previously recognized and correlate with measures of circulating immune complexes.
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