Back to Search Start Over

FRI0218 IMMUNOPHENOTYPIC SUBGROUPS OF SLE DEFINED BY AUTOANTIBODIES, GENE EXPRESSION AND FLOW CYTOMETRIC ANALYSIS

Authors :
Yuzaiful Md Yusof
K. Dutton
Neil McHugh
Antonios Psarras
M. Aguilar-Zamora
Edward M Vital
Hui Lu
Zoe E Betteridge
Source :
Poster Presentations.
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and European League Against Rheumatism, 2019.

Abstract

Background: SLE may be stratified according to a range of different immune assessments but the relationships between these are less well defined. MASTERPLANS is an MRC-funded consortium that seeks to identify immunophenotypic subgroups of patients that predict response to therapy. Objectives: Our objective here was to analyse a clinically well-phenotyped patients using a suite of immune assessments and identify inter-relationships between these features as well as subgroups of patients who may differ in response to therapy. Methods: 143 SLE patients were evaluated for clinical phenotype using BILAG-2004, autoantibodies using radioimmunoprecipitation (IP, University of Bath), two interferon scores (IFN-Score-A and IFN-Score-B), flow cytometry for major circulating immune cell subsets, as well as the surface protein expression of tetherin on each subset, a cell-specific assay for IFN response. Unsupervised hierarchical clustering was used to define autoantibody subgroups. IFN scores (reflected dCT) were compared between the groups using multivariate models. Other variables were compared using Kruskal-Wallis test with pairwise comparisons. Results: Using IP, 141 patients could be divided into five subgroups: U1RNP/Sm+ only (n=23), Ro60+ only (n=8), U1RNP/Sm+Ro60+ (n=6), Ro60+Ro52+La+ (n=11), Ro52+ (n=16) and other ANA (n=77). Antibody subgroups was strongly associated with IFN-Score-A (F=4.39, p=0.001). Expression was lowest for “other ANA”, intermediate for single antibody groups, and highest with multiple positive antibodies. Multivariate linear regression, including interaction terms between antibody types, revealed that Ro60 and U1RNP/Sm were the independent predictors of IFN-Score-A level (p=0.051 and 0.009 respectively). There was no association between autoantibody status and IFN-Score-B (F=0.973, p=0.438). In flow cytometry, the U1RNP/Sm group was notable for significantly lower numbers of CD4-T-cells and memory-B-cells. Memory -B-cells were also lower in antibody-positive groups compared to “other ANA”. Tetherin expression was increased in antibody positive groups, but to a similar extent on most cell subsets. Memory B cell tetherin was significantly higher in the groups with multiple positive antibodies. U1RNP/Sm+ was associated with renal involvement (p=0.004). Mucocutaneous involvement was greater in the Ro60+Ro52+La+ group (p=0.037). Conclusion: This cohort revealed relationships between immune features. U1RNP/Sm antibody was notable for defining a group of patients with a cluster of immune abnormalities, including the greatest elevation of IFN activity, greater abnormalities on flow cytometry and clinical renal involvement. This was independent to the IFN-Score-B high status that predicts better clinical response to rituximab (presented elsewhere at this conference). Future work in MASTERPLANS will investigate the significance of these subgroups for response to therapy. Disclosure of Interests: Marta Aguilar-Zamora: None declared, Hui Lu: None declared, Zoe Betteridge: None declared, Katie Dutton: None declared, Md Yuzaiful Md Yusof: None declared, Antonios Psarras: None declared, The MASTERPLANS Consortium. : None declared, Neil McHugh: None declared, Edward Vital Grant/research support from: He has received honoraria and research grant support from Roche, GSK and AstraZeneca.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Poster Presentations
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........dd3c5030669492cf85e617173f57a6ef