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Systemic lupus erythematosus and neutropaenia: a hallmark of haematological manifestations

Authors :
Laurent Arnaud
Zahir Amoura
Thierry Martin
Anne-Sophie Korganow
Aurélien Guffroy
Jean Sibilia
François Maurier
Bernard Bonnotte
Andreas Schwarting
Gilles Blaison
Pierre Kieffer
Nadine Magy-Bertrand
J Sibilia
Yannick Dieudonne
C Fiehn
M Rizzi
R Voll
Z Amoura
C Sordet
M Bartsch
A Schwarting
L Arnaud
Christoph Fiehn
JE Gottenberg
R Max
H-H Peter
J-L Pasquali
T Martín
A Meyer
J Thiel
P Kieffer
N Venhoff
H Lorenz
F Maurier
Aurore Meyer
Hannes Martin Lorenz
Jean-Louis Pennaforte
Hans-Hartmut Peter
Reinhard Edmund Voll
G Blaison
B Bonnotte
E Chatelus
E Ciobanu
F Duchene
JP Faller
A Gorse
O Hinschberger
F Jaeger
M Kilifa
N Magy-Bertrand
L Martzolff
J-L Pennaforte
V Poindron
S Revuz
M Samson
A Theulin
D Wahl
JC Weber
N Bartholomä
S Finzel
A Funkert
M Hausberg
Source :
Lupus Science and Medicine, Vol 7, Iss 1 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2020.

Abstract

Objective Systemic lupus is a chronic autoimmune disease characterised by its phenotypic heterogeneity. Neutropaenia is a frequent event in SLE occurring in 20%–40% of patients depending on the threshold value of neutrophil count. On a daily basis, the management of neutropaenia in SLE is difficult with several possible causes. Moreover, the infectious consequences of neutropaenia in SLE remain not well defined.Methods 998 patients from the Lupus BioBank of the upper Rhein (LBBR), a large German and French cohort of patients with SLE, mostly of Caucasian origin (83%), were included in this study. Neutropaenia was considered when neutrophil count was below 1800×106/L. An additional analysis of detailed medical records was done for 65 LBBR patients with neutropaenia.Results 208 patients with neutropaenia (21%) were compared with 779 SLE patients without neutropaenia. Neutropaenia in SLE was significantly associated with thrombocytopaenia (OR 4.11 (2.57–10.3)), lymphopaenia (OR 4.41 (2.51–11.5)) and low C3 (OR 1.91 (1.03–4.37)) in multivariate analysis. 65 representative patients with neutropaenia were analysed. Neutropaenia was moderate to severe in 38%, chronic in 31%, and both severe and chronic in 23% of cases. Moderate to severe and chronic neutropaenia were both associated with lymphopaenia and thrombopaenia. Chronic neutropaenia was also associated anti-Ro/SSA antibodies and moderate to severe neutropaenia with oral ulcers.Conclusion This study is to date the largest cohort to describe neutropaenia in SLE. Neutropaenia displays a strong association with other cytopaenias, suggesting a common mechanism. Chronic neutropaenia is associated with anti-Ro/SSA antibodies with or without identified Sjögren’s disease.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20538790
Volume :
7
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Lupus Science and Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.f7b091098c243df9c71de7528e7d046
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/lupus-2020-000399