- Lupus nephritis: proteinuria >500 mg/24h or cellular casts → renal biopsy
- Neuropsychiatric lupus: seizures, psychosis, aseptic meningitis
- Catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome: multi‑organ thrombosis – 50% mortality
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE)
Must-Not-Miss / Red Flags
Definition & Core Concept
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a chronic, multisystem autoimmune disease characterized by the production of antinuclear antibodies (ANA), immune complex deposition, and inflammation affecting skin, joints, kidneys, and other organs.
Epidemiology & Risk Factors
- Prevalence: 20‑150 per 100,000; female‑to‑male ratio 9:1
- Peak onset 15‑44 years
- More severe in African American, Hispanic, and Asian populations
Pathophysiology (Rule of 3)
- Genetic predisposition + environmental trigger (UV light, infection, drugs) → loss of self‑tolerance
- Autoantibody production (ANA, anti‑dsDNA, anti‑Sm) → immune complex formation
- Immune complex deposition in tissues (glomeruli, skin, joints) → complement activation → inflammation and tissue damage
Clinical Presentation
- Constitutional: fever, fatigue, weight loss
- Musculoskeletal: arthralgia, non‑erosive arthritis
- Mucocutaneous: malar rash (butterfly), discoid lesions, photosensitivity, oral ulcers
- Renal: proteinuria, hematuria, hypertension
- Hematologic: anemia, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia
- Serositis: pleuritis, pericarditis
Diagnostic Workup
ANA: sensitive but not specific (positive in >95% of SLE). Anti‑dsDNA and anti‑Sm: highly specific. Complement C3/C4: low in active disease. Urinalysis: proteinuria, cellular casts. Renal biopsy: if urine abnormalities to classify lupus nephritis.
Management Protocol
- Mild (skin/joint): Hydroxychloroquine 200‑400 mg daily (all patients unless contraindicated), NSAIDs, low‑dose corticosteroids
- Moderate: Azathioprine, Mycophenolate mofetil, or Methotrexate as steroid‑sparing agents
- Severe (nephritis, CNS): High‑dose corticosteroids (Methylprednisolone 500‑1,000 mg IV ×3 days) + Cyclophosphamide or Mycophenolate; consider Rituximab or Belimumab
- Sun protection: broad‑spectrum sunscreen SPF ≥50
Complications & Prognosis
- End‑stage renal disease from lupus nephritis
- Cardiovascular disease (accelerated atherosclerosis)
- Avascular necrosis of the hip from chronic steroids
- Infections (leading cause of death)
ICU Criteria
ICU admission if: diffuse alveolar hemorrhage, catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome, or severe neuropsychiatric lupus.
Clinical Vignette
Pearls & Pitfalls
- Hydroxychloroquine reduces flares and mortality – it should be prescribed to every SLE patient unless contraindicated (retinal toxicity screen annually).
- Pregnancy in SLE should be planned when disease is quiescent for ≥6 months due to high risk of flare and fetal loss.
Discharge & Follow-Up
Rheumatology visits every 3‑6 months. Labs (CBC, C3/C4, anti‑dsDNA, urinalysis) to monitor activity. Annual ophthalmology exam for hydroxychloroquine retinopathy.
Literature & Guidelines
EULAR 2024 Recommendations for SLE Management. PMID: 38703200.