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Incidence rates of systemic lupus erythematosus in the USA: estimates from a meta-analysis of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention national lupus registries

Authors :
Peter M Izmirly
Elizabeth D Ferucci
Emily C Somers
Lu Wang
S Sam Lim
Cristina Drenkard
Maria Dall'Era
W Joseph McCune
Caroline Gordon
Charles Helmick
Hilary Parton
Source :
Lupus Science & Medicine
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

ObjectiveTo estimate the annual incidence rate of SLE in the USA.MethodsA meta-analysis used sex/race/ethnicity-specific data spanning 2002–2009 from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention network of four population-based state registries to estimate the incidence rates. SLE was defined as fulfilling the 1997 revised American College of Rheumatology classification criteria. Given heterogeneity across sites, a random effects model was employed. Applying sex/race/ethnicity-stratified rates, including data from the Indian Health Service registry, to the 2018 US Census population generated estimates of newly diagnosed SLE cases.ResultsThe pooled incidence rate per 100 000 person-years was 5.1 (95% CI 4.6 to 5.6), higher in females than in males (8.7 vs 1.2), and highest among black females (15.9), followed by Asian/Pacific Islander (7.6), Hispanic (6.8) and white (5.7) females. Male incidence was highest in black males (2.4), followed by Hispanic (0.9), white (0.8) and Asian/Pacific Islander (0.4) males. The American Indian/Alaska Native population had the second highest race-specific SLE estimates for females (10.4 per 100 000) and highest for males (3.8 per 100 000). In 2018, an estimated 14 263 persons (95% CI 11 563 to 17 735) were newly diagnosed with SLE in the USA.ConclusionsA network of population-based SLE registries provided estimates of SLE incidence rates and numbers diagnosed in the USA.

Details

ISSN :
20538790
Volume :
8
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Lupus sciencemedicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....716338bf0a3503a831b564372a7d7368