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Journal : The Indonesian Journal of General Medicine

The Association of Vitamin D Deficiency with Disease Activity in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus: A Systematic Review Calista Giovani; Charles Sanjaya Seikka
The Indonesian Journal of General Medicine Vol. 17 No. 2 (2025): The Indonesian Journal of General Medicine
Publisher : International Medical Journal Corp. Ltd

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.70070/v70g4262

Abstract

Introduction: Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) is a complex autoimmune disease characterized by chronic inflammation and multisystem organ damage. Vitamin D, a potent immunomodulator, has been implicated as a potential environmental factor influencing SLE pathogenesis and activity. A high prevalence of hypovitaminosis D is consistently observed in SLE patients, yet its precise role and the therapeutic benefit of supplementation remain areas of active investigation. This systematic review aims to synthesize the current evidence on the association between vitamin D status and disease activity in SLE and to evaluate the efficacy of vitamin D supplementation as an adjunctive therapy. Methods: A systematic search of medical databases was conducted to identify relevant observational studies and randomized controlled trials (RCTs) published up to 2025. Studies were included if they investigated the relationship between serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels and SLE disease activity, or the effects of vitamin D supplementation on clinical and serological outcomes in SLE patients. Data on study design, patient characteristics, interventions, and outcomes were extracted. The quality of included RCTs was assessed using the Cochrane Risk of Bias (RoB 2) tool, while observational studies were evaluated using the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. Results: A total of 17 studies, comprising 12 observational studies and 5 interventional trials, met the inclusion criteria. Observational studies consistently demonstrated a high prevalence of vitamin D deficiency and insufficiency in SLE cohorts. A statistically significant inverse correlation between serum 25(OH)D levels and global disease activity scores (e.g., SLEDAI) was reported in the majority of these studies. Lower vitamin D levels were also associated with specific organ involvement, particularly lupus nephritis, and adverse serological markers, including higher anti-dsDNA titers and lower complement levels. Interventional studies and meta-analyses showed that vitamin D supplementation significantly, albeit modestly, reduced SLEDAI scores. The most consistent clinical benefit was observed in the improvement of patient-reported fatigue. Discussion: The evidence strongly supports a relationship between low vitamin D status and higher disease activity in SLE. The biological plausibility for this association is robust, grounded in vitamin D's multifaceted immunomodulatory effects on both innate and adaptive immunity. While supplementation appears to be a safe and beneficial adjunctive therapy, particularly for managing fatigue, its effect on global disease activity is modest. Heterogeneity in trial designs, including dosing regimens and study duration, contributes to variability in outcomes and highlights the need for larger, standardized trials. Conclusion: Vitamin D deficiency is a significant and modifiable factor associated with increased disease activity in SLE. Routine screening for and correction of hypovitaminosis D is warranted in all SLE patients, both for its established role in bone health and its potential as a low-cost, adjunctive immunomodulatory therapy. Future research should focus on large-scale, long-term RCTs to define optimal dosing strategies and target serum levels for specific clinical phenotypes.
The Association of Chronic Kidney Disease with Increased Cardiovascular Morbidity and Mortality: A Systematic Review Calista Giovani; Charles Sanjaya Seikka
The Indonesian Journal of General Medicine Vol. 17 No. 2 (2025): The Indonesian Journal of General Medicine
Publisher : International Medical Journal Corp. Ltd

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.70070/edv76569

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) represents a global public health crisis, affecting over 10% of the world's population. It is now unequivocally recognized not merely as a renal condition but as a systemic state of exceptionally high cardiovascular risk, where patients are more likely to die from cardiovascular complications than to progress to end-stage kidney disease. This review systematically synthesizes the evidence quantifying this profound risk. METHODS: A systematic review of prospective cohort studies and meta-analyses published between January 2000 and September 2024 was conducted using PubMed, EMBASE, and the Cochrane Library. Studies were included if they reported on the association between CKD, defined by estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) or albuminuria, and specific cardiovascular morbidity or mortality outcomes in adult populations. The risk of bias in included non-randomised studies was systematically assessed using the Cochrane ROBINS-I (Risk Of Bias In Non-randomised Studies - of Interventions) tool. RESULTS: A total of 18 prospective cohort studies and 3 meta-analyses, encompassing a collective population of over 5 million participants, met the inclusion criteria. The evidence demonstrates a strong, independent, and graded association between declining eGFR and increasing albuminuria with heightened risks for all-cause and cardiovascular mortality. Significant associations were confirmed for over 15 distinct outcomes. Compared to preserved renal function, CKD was associated with substantially increased risks for myocardial infarction (Hazard Ratio up to 1.90), ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke (HR up to 2.19), incident heart failure (HR >2.0 for severe CKD), atrial fibrillation (HR up to 4.04 in stage 4 CKD), peripheral artery disease (HR >6.0 for associated complications), and sudden cardiac death, for which CKD confers a risk 4 to 20 times greater than that of the general population. DISCUSSION: The profound cardiovascular risk in CKD is driven by a synergistic interplay of highly prevalent traditional risk factors (e.g., hypertension, diabetes) and potent, non-traditional uremia-specific pathways. These include chronic inflammation, oxidative stress, sympathetic overactivity, anemia, and CKD-Mineral and Bone Disorder (CKD-MBD), which leads to accelerated and extensive vascular calcification. This unique pathophysiology renders general population risk scores inadequate and necessitates an integrated, cardiorenal-metabolic approach to patient management, as advocated by modern clinical practice guidelines. CONCLUSION: The evidence is overwhelming and definitive: CKD is a potent and independent risk multiplier for a wide spectrum of fatal and non-fatal cardiovascular events. Aggressive risk stratification using both eGFR and albuminuria, coupled with intensive management of both traditional and CKD-specific risk factors, is imperative to mitigate this substantial burden of disease.
The Association of Chemotherapy-Induced Neutropenia with the Risk of Febrile Neutropenia and Infections: A Systematic Review Calista Giovani; Charles Sanjaya Seikka
The Indonesian Journal of General Medicine Vol. 17 No. 2 (2025): The Indonesian Journal of General Medicine
Publisher : International Medical Journal Corp. Ltd

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.70070/73fmrg57

Abstract

INTRODUCTION Chemotherapy-induced neutropenia (CIN) is a primary dose-limiting toxicity of myelosuppressive cancer therapy. It significantly increases a patient's susceptibility to febrile neutropenia (FN), an oncologic emergency associated with severe infections, substantial morbidity, and mortality. This systematic review synthesizes the evidence linking CIN to the risk of FN and subsequent infectious complications. METHODS A systematic search of PubMed, EMBASE, and the Cochrane Library was conducted for studies published from January 2010 onwards, following PRISMA guidelines. Observational studies and clinical trials involving cancer patients receiving chemotherapy and reporting on neutropenic complications were included. Data on over 15 distinct clinical, microbiological, and treatment-related outcomes were extracted. The methodological quality of included studies was appraised using the Cochrane Risk of Bias tool and the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. RESULTS Twenty studies, encompassing prospective and retrospective cohorts, cross-sectional analyses, and validation studies, met the inclusion criteria. The evidence confirms that CIN is a direct precursor to FN, with an incidence of up to 16.8% per chemotherapy course, and a peak risk during the first treatment cycle. FN frequently necessitates hospitalization, with a mean duration of approximately 8 days, and is associated with significant in-hospital mortality rates ranging from 2.6% to over 25% in high-risk, culture-positive cohorts. Bloodstream infections are the most common severe documented complication. The microbiological landscape is evolving, with a resurgence of Gram-negative pathogens, including multidrug-resistant organisms, challenging standard empiric antibiotic regimens. Neutropenic events directly impact oncologic care, leading to frequent chemotherapy dose reductions and delays, which can compromise treatment efficacy. DISCUSSION The synthesized evidence underscores the profound clinical and economic burden of neutropenic complications. A critical gap exists between guideline recommendations for risk stratification and the poor predictive performance of existing clinical tools like the MASCC and CISNE scores. An episode of FN serves not only as an acute event but also as a sentinel marker of patient vulnerability, predicting a significantly increased long-term risk of subsequent infections. CONCLUSION CIN is unequivocally associated with an elevated risk of FN and life-threatening infections. This relationship drives significant morbidity, mortality, and disruptions to cancer treatment. Future efforts must prioritize the development of dynamic, data-driven risk prediction models and surveillance-informed antimicrobial stewardship to optimize patient management and improve oncologic outcomes.