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Clinical significance of anti-Ro52 (TRIM21) antibodies in adult patients with connective tissue diseases.

Authors :
Decker, Paul
Moulinet, Thomas
Lopez, Benjamin
Dubucquoi, Sylvain
Bonnotte, Bernard
Lakomy, Daniela
Revuz, Sabine
Luc, Amandine
Bittencourt, Marcelo De Carvalho
Hachulla, Eric
Jaussaud, Roland
Source :
European Journal of Internal Medicine. Sep2021, Vol. 91, p45-52. 8p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

• Anti-Ro52 antibodies were strongly associated with the prevalence of interstitial lung disease at the diagnosis of connective tissue disease, even after adjusting for the coexistence of anti-Ro60 antibodies. • Anti-Ro52 antibodies positivity should lead clinicians to careful screening of interstitial lung disease at the diagnosis of connective tissue disease. • Anti-Ro52 antibodies could represent a useful severity marker of connective tissue diseases. Clinical significance of anti-Ro52 antibodies in connective tissue diseases (CTD) is controversial. Anti-Ro52 antibodies might be associated with a more severe CTD phenotype, especially interstitial lung disease (ILD). The aims of this study were to evaluate ILD prevalence and severity, the prevalence of micro- or macroangiopathy and CTD-associated cancers in CTD with anti-Ro52 antibodies. CTD patients with anti-Ro52 antibody screening by immunoblot at diagnosis were enrolled. Two groups were retrospectively formed according to the presence of anti-Ro52 antibodies with an unbiased 1:1 matching on CTD types. Unsupervised multiple correspondence analysis and hierarchical clustering analysis were used to aggregate anti-Ro52 positive patients in subgroups. 408 CTD patients were included. Anti-Ro52 antibodies were detected in 33 % of CTD patients. Anti-Ro52 antibodies were associated with ILD at CTD diagnosis (47.8% vs. 23.0%, OR 3.3 95% IC 1.4 to 8.0, p = 0.008), even after adjusting for the presence of anti-Ro60 antibodies, especially in patients with antisynthetase syndrome, primary Sjögren syndrome and systemic sclerosis. Micro- or macroangiopathy was more frequent in anti-Ro52 positive CTD patients (18.6% vs. 9.7%, p = 0.02) and CTD patients with anti-Ro52 antibodies experienced more frequent relapses and required more immunosuppressive drugs. Clusters 4 and 5 identified anti-Ro52 positive CTD patients with severe ILD and with clinical features of systemic sclerosis or antisynthetase syndrome respectively. We found that anti-Ro52 antibodies were independently associated with ILD in CTD patients irrespective of CTD type. Anti-Ro52 antibodies could be associated with severity and a more relapsing disease course in CTD patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09536205
Volume :
91
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
European Journal of Internal Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
152099619
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejim.2021.04.020