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Characterisation of the coexistence between sarcoidosis and Sjögren's syndrome. Analysis of 43 patients

Authors :
Alejandra Flores-Chavez
Wan-Fai Ng
Alessia Alunno
Nevsun Inanc
Carlos Feijoo-Massó
Raphaele Seror
Gabriela Hernandez-Molina
Valerie Devauchelle-Pensec
Benedikt Hofauer
Sandra G. Pasoto
Angel Robles
Miriam Akasbi
Miguel López-Dupla
Soledad Retamozo
Matilde Bandeira
Vasco C. Romão
Francesco Carubbi
Daniel Loaiza-Cabello
Jóse-Salvador García-Morillo
Mariana Benegas
Marcelo Sánchez
África Muxí
David Fuster
Jacobo Sellarés
Xavier Mariette
Manuel Ramos-Casals
Pilar Brito-Zéron
Source :
Clinical and Experimental Rheumatology.
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Clinical and Experimental Rheumatology, 2022.

Abstract

To characterise the key epidemiological, clinical, immunological, imaging, and pathological features of the coexistence between sarcoidosis and Sjögren's syndrome (SS).All centres included in two large multicentre registries (the Sjögren Syndrome Big Data Consortium and the Sarco-GEAS-SEMI Registry) were contacted searching for potential cases of coexistence between SS and sarcoidosis seen in daily practice. Inclusion criteria were the fulfilment of the current classification criteria both for SS (2016 ACR/EULAR) and sarcoidosis (WASOG). The following features were considered for evaluating a coexisting immunopathological scenario between the two diseases: non-caseating granulomas (NCG), focal lymphocytic sialadenitis (FLS) and positive anti-Ro antibodies.We identified 43 patients who fulfilled the inclusion criteria (38 women, with a mean age of 53 years at diagnosis of SS and of 52 years at diagnosis of sarcoidosis). In 28 (65%) cases, sarcoidosis was diagnosed concomitantly with SS, or during the follow-up of patients with an already diagnosed SS, while in the remaining 15 (35%), SS was diagnosed during the follow-up of an already diagnosed sarcoidosis. Patients in whom sarcoidosis was diagnosed first showed a lower mean age (43.88 vs. 55.67 years, p=0.005) and were less frequently women (73% vs. 96%, p=0.04) in comparison with those in whom sarcoidosis was diagnosed concomitantly with SS, or during the follow-up of an already diagnosed SS. We identified the following immunopathological scenarios: a combination of NCG involving extrasalivary tissues and anti-Ro antibodies in 55% of patients, a coexistence of both pathological scenarios (extrasalivary NCG and FLS in MSGB) in 42% (with positive anti-Ro antibodies in two thirds of cases), and NCG involving salivary glands and anti-Ro antibodies in 3% of cases.We have characterised the largest reported series of patients who fulfilled the current classification criteria for both SS and sarcoidosis. This implies that sarcoidosis (and not just the presence of isolated NCG on salivary gland biopsy) may, like other systemic autoimmune diseases, coexist with SS, and that a sarcoidosis diagnosis does not preclude the development of SS in the future.

Details

ISSN :
1593098X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical and Experimental Rheumatology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ac01a59aa6902167a68f4ba3b5142603
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.55563/clinexprheumatol/pg964c