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. 2023 Jul 13;42(11):2981–2986. doi: 10.1007/s10067-023-06682-w

Key Points

Our findings show that histopathology changes other than lupus nephritis may occur in a significant number of patients with clinical and laboratory signs of novel kidney involvement.

Low-grade proteinuria does not exclude findings of active lupus nephritis that require the start of immunosuppressive therapy.

The study stresses the importance of performing kidney biopsies also in the presence of low-grade proteinuria or when signs of kidney function abnormalities occur.

This is crucial as early detection and prompt initiation of therapy may improve outcomes in lupus nephritis.