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Journal Article
Review
Aging in Primary Systemic Vasculitis: Implications for Diagnosis, Clinical Manifestations, and Management.
Drugs & Aging 2019 January
Anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA)-associated vasculitides (AAV) usually affect adults and older populations. The well recognized clinical (i.e., granulomatosis with polyangiitis [GPA], microscopic polyangiitis, and eosinophilic GPA) and serological phenotypes (i.e., anti-MPO-ANCA, anti-PR3-ANCA and ANCA negative) within AAV differ substantially for clinical, demographic, and epidemiological features, including age at presentation. Whether and how aging could contribute to the clinical expression of these disease phenotypes is intriguing and still overlooked. In addition, despite being predominantly a disease of the elderly, most of the studies analyzing drug interventions and the clinical trials on AAV explicitly excluded older patients, limiting the understanding of the disease in this subset of patients. In elderly patients induced with cyclophosphamide, a lower dose of treatment for patients aged 60 years or older and with reduced renal function has been recommended. Giant cell arteritis (GCA) and Takayasu's arteritis (TAK) are two primary systemic vasculitides involving large vessels that differ in age at presentation, with GCA patients being at least 10 years older than TAK patients. Different treatment approaches are effective in these conditions. However, a few authors have suggested that they might be considered expressions of the same clinical syndrome, rather than two different diseases. Novel insights into the role of senescence-related immunological and vascular processes might help to interpret the link between these two conditions. Overall, the impact of aging on all these vasculitides is complex and not easy to analyze. So far, few studies focusing on this topic have been published. We reviewed data on the clinical presentation, epidemiology, therapy, and disease- and treatment-related complications in patients affected by these vasculitides, highlighting the differences in young versus elderly subjects.
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