Research Article: Endoscopic features associated with hospitalization outcomes in IgA vasculitis patients: a single-center retrospective cohort study
Abstract:
To evaluate associations between endoscopic features and hospitalization outcomes in IgA vasculitis (IgAV) with gastrointestinal (GI) involvement, focusing on endoscopic subtypes associated with prolonged hospitalization.
We analyzed 132 IgAV patients with GI involvement and complete endoscopic data at a large-volume center (January 2019 to December 2024). Clinical manifestations, endoscopic characteristics, laboratory data, and abdominal imaging findings at admission were reviewed. Prolonged length of stay (LOS) was defined as LOS exceeding the 75th percentile (>13 days). Multivariable logistic regression and gamma regression (log link) were used to examine factors associated with prolonged LOS and LOS as a continuous outcome. Sensitivity analyses additionally adjusted for treatment variables and renal involvement. Laboratory parameters were compared across endoscopic subgroups in exploratory analyses.
The median age of the patients was 18 years (IQR: 15.0–45.5), with a male-to-female ratio of 2:1. Abdominal pain was the most common presenting symptom. Bowel wall thickening was the most frequent finding on abdominal imaging. The most prevalent endoscopic finding was congestion/edema, followed by erosions, ulcers, and petechiae/ecchymosis. Endoscopic ulceration (OR 2.40, 95% CI 1.09–5.27, p=0.029) and multi-segment GI involvement (OR 2.58, 95% CI 1.20–5.58, p=0.016) were independently associated with prolonged LOS. Gamma regression showed that ulceration was associated with a 27.7% longer LOS (RR 1.277, 95% CI 1.047–1.564, p=0.018) and multi-segment involvement with a 34.7% longer LOS (RR 1.347, 95% CI 1.035–1.748, p=0.025). The association with ulceration remained significant after adjusting for treatment factors, whereas the association with multi-segment involvement was attenuated. The association of ulceration with LOS was more pronounced in patients aged ?18 years. In sensitivity analyses, additional adjustment for renal involvement did not materially change the associations between endoscopic features and LOS.
In IgAV with GI involvement, endoscopic ulceration is the endoscopic feature most consistently associated with longer hospitalization, and the association appears stronger in patients aged ?18 years. Multi-segment involvement shows a weaker association that attenuates after treatment adjustment. Overall, these findings support the clinical value of endoscopic phenotyping to inform clinical assessment and should be interpreted as associations rather than prognostic predictions.
Introduction:
Immunoglobulin A vasculitis (IgAV), formerly known as Henoch-Schönlein purpura, is an acute, systemic, immune complex-mediated vasculitis of small vessels characterized by IgA-dominant immune complex deposition. There are four main presenting symptoms and signs: palpable purpura without thrombocytopenia or coagulopathy; arthritis and arthralgia; abdominal pain, sometimes associated with bleeding; and renal disease (IgA nephropathy) that presents with proteinuria or hematuria ( 1 – 6 ). Although IgA vasculitis is…
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