Sarcoidosis: a single hospital-based study in a 24-year period.

2015 
Clinical presentation of sarcoidosis varies according to race and geographical area. We describe the clinical spectrum and outcome of sarcoidosis in Mexican patients compared with other populations. Methods: We reviewed the medical charts of 21 patients with sarcoidosis seen at a referral hospital in 1989-2012; organ involvement was assessed using the ACCESS instrument. We compared our results with the ACCESS and Latin American studies. We used descriptive statistics and reported odd ratios with 95% CI. Results and Conclusion: Fifty-two percent were women; median age was 31 years; median time to diagnosis, 5.5 months. Frequency of organ involvement was: constitutional symptoms 62%, lungs 66.6%, skin 42.8%, bone marrow 23.4%, lymph node 19%, liver 19%, and eye 19%. After one year of follow-up, 47.5% of patients were asymptomatic without treatment, 38% asymptomatic on treatment, and 14.2% symptomatic on treatment. In our patients, pulmonary involvement was lower (66.6 vs. 94.9%; p = 0.001) and cutaneous (42.8 vs.15.8%; p = 0.003) and bone marrow (23.4 vs. 4.7%; p = 0.001) were higher than in the ACCESS cohort. Data regarding Latin American populations was scarce. The clinical spectrum of sarcoidosis in our population differed from other studies, with a higher frequency of cutaneous sarcoidosis and less pulmonary involvement
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