The relationship between renal morphology and clinical disease was analysed in 148 patients with SLE attending a lupus clinic. Patients were not selected for renal disease. Renal tissue was assessed according to the World Health Organization classification of lupus nephritis, the preseuce of active and chronic lesions was recorded and disease activity was measured according to a standard protocol. All sections of the classification were represented in this group of patients. Active and chronic lesions were more likely to occur among patients with Class III/IV (proliferative glomerulonephritis), than in any other category. Patients with Class III/IV biopsy were more likely to have evidence of clinical renal disease than patients in Class II (mesangial). However, almost half of the Class II patients had some evidence of renal disease, including elevated serum creatinine, as well as important non-glomerular lesions. Without biopsy they might have been thought to have proliferative lesions and been treated more aggressively. Two patients with proliferative glomerulouephritis had no clinical evidence of renal disease. Thus, at the time of biopsy results renal histological examination did not uniformly correlate with clinical renal disease.
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