Abstract
Background/Aims
The major antinuclear autoantibodies of systemic sclerosis (SSc) associate with different skin score trajectories and risk of internal organ manifestations. To elucidate ...molecular differences between ANA-defined subgroups, we utilised the prospective BIOPSY cohort of well-characterised SSc patients.
Methods
The prospectively collected BIOPSY cohort recruited 52 SSc patients (21 early dcSSc, 15 established dcSSc, 16 lcSSc) and 16 healthy controls (HC). 36 (69%) of the SSc patients are female. Mean disease duration in the early dcSSc cohort was 24 months (sd 12 months), and in established dcSSc was 11.3 years. ANA frequency in BIOPSY reflected the overall dcSSc population: anti-topoisomerase-1 (ATA) n = 14 (27%), anti-RNA pol III (ARA) n = 12 (23%) and other n = 26 (50%). Mean baseline skin score (MRSS) for early dcSSc was 21 (sd 11.2). At a group level mRSS peak was 21.9 (11.8) at 3 months and fell to 19.1(10.5) at 12 months. Serum biomarkers of ECM turnover and fibrosis were measured three monthly and genome-wide transcriptomic profiling of whole skin and whole blood performed by RNA-Seq. Statistical analysis used RStudio with ANOVA, and Tukey post-hoc test. Differential gene expression used the Bioconductor limma software, with standard thresholds for significance.
Results
At baseline, there were differences in soluble markers between clinical SSc sugroups and HC but not for major ANA subgroups. However, we found clear differences in early dcSSc analysed by major ANA subset for longitudinal change in serum markers of fibrosis and in whole skin gene expression, suggesting a mechanistic basis for the distinct clinical phenotypes associated with hallmark ANAs. During follow-up, significant differences were observed in HA, TIMP1, and PIIINP at 6 and 12 months (p < 0.05), with stable levels in ATA+ patients compared to progressively increased levels in the other subgroups. There were 564 significantly differentially expressed genes in skin between early dcSSc and HC. Unsupervised clustering differentiated patients with ARA and ATA positivity with early dcSSc. 54 genes were significantly differentially expressed in skin between ATA and ARA patients. Whilst 179 genes were differentially expressed in whole blood between early dcSSc compared with HC, no genes could significantly differentiate ATA from ARA. Functional analysis using HALLMARK pathway analysis identified both shared pathways associated with SSc across ANA groups (e.g. TGF beta signaling, IL6 JAK STAT3 signalling, inflammatory response), and pathways only upregulated in patients with ATA (e.g. Wnt beta catenin signaling, Notch signaling), and ARA (e.g. interferon gamma response, adipogenesis).
Conclusion
We have found significant differences in skin gene expression and longitudinal change in serum markers by autoantibody specificity in dcSSc. Our findings have implications for SSc pathogenesis and support stratification by ANA subgroup in clinical studies.
Disclosure
K.E. Clark: None. C. Campochiaro: None. E. Csomor: Corporate appointments; employee of GSK. A. Taylor: Corporate appointments; employee of GSK. K. Nevin: Corporate appointments; employee of GSK. N. Galwey: Corporate appointments; employee of GSK. M.A. Morse: Corporate appointments; employee of GSK. V.H. Ong: None. E. Derrett-Smith: None. N. Wisniacki: Corporate appointments; employee of GSK. S. Flint: Corporate appointments; employee of GSK. C.P. Denton: Consultancies; Actelion, GlaxoSmithKline, Bayer, Sanofi, lnventiva, Boehringer Ingelheim, Roche, Bristol Myers Squibb, CSL Behring, UCB, Leadiant Biosciences, Corbus, Servier, Arxx Therapeutics.
To compare clinical characteristics, including the frequency of cutaneous, extramuscular manifestations, and malignancy, between adults with anti-synthetase syndrome (ASyS) and dermatomyositis (DM).
...Using data regarding adults from the MYONET registry, a cohort of DM patients with anti-Mi2/-TIF1ɣ/-NXP2/-SAE/-MDA5 autoantibodies, and a cohort of ASyS patients with anti-tRNA synthetase autoantibodies (anti-Jo1/-PL7/-PL12/-OJ/-EJ/-Zo/-KS) were identified. Patients with DM sine dermatitis or with discordant dual autoantibody specificities were excluded. Sub-cohorts of patients with ASyS with or without skin involvement were defined based on presence of DM-type rashes (heliotrope rash, Gottron's papules/sign, violaceous rash, shawl sign, V sign, erythroderma, and/or periorbital rash).
In total 1,054 patients were included (DM, n = 405; ASyS, n = 649). In ASyS cohort, 31% (n = 203) had DM-type skin involvement (ASyS-DMskin). A higher frequency of extramuscular manifestations, including Mechanic's hands, Raynaud's phenomenon, arthritis, interstitial lung disease, and cardiac involvement differentiated ASyS-DMskin from DM (all p< 0.001), whereas higher frequency of any of four DM-type rashes: heliotrope rash (n = 248, 61% vs n = 90, 44%), violaceous rash (n = 166, 41% vs n = 57, 9%), V sign (n = 124, 31% vs n = 28, 4%), and shawl sign (n = 133, 33% vs n = 18, 3%) differentiated DM from ASyS-DMskin (all p< 0.005). Cancer-associated myositis (CAM) was more frequent in DM (n = 67, 17%) compared with ASyS (n = 21, 3%) and ASyS-DMskin (n = 7, 3%) cohorts (both p< 0.001).
DM-type rashes are frequent in patients with ASyS; however, distinct clinical manifestations differentiate these patients from classical DM. Skin involvement in ASyS does not necessitate increased malignancy surveillance. These findings will inform future ASyS classification criteria and patient management.
No studies have reported mental health symptom comparisons prior to and during COVID-19 in vulnerable medical populations.
To compare anxiety and depression symptoms among people with a pre-existing ...medical condition and factors associated with changes.
Pre-COVID-19 Scleroderma Patient-centered Intervention Network Cohort data were linked to COVID-19 data from April 2020. Multiple linear and logistic regression were used to assess factors associated with continuous change and ≥ 1 minimal clinically important difference (MCID) change for anxiety (PROMIS Anxiety 4a v1.0; MCID = 4.0) and depression (Patient Health Questionnaire-8; MCID = 3.0) symptoms, controlling for pre-COVID-19 levels.
Mean anxiety symptoms increased 4.9 points (95% confidence interval CI 4.0 to 5.7). Depression symptom change was negligible (0.3 points; 95% CI -0.7 to 0.2). Compared to France (N = 159), adjusted anxiety symptom change scores were significantly higher in the United Kingdom (N = 50; 3.3 points, 95% CI 0.9 to 5.6), United States (N = 128; 2.5 points, 95% CI 0.7 to 4.2), and Canada (N = 98; 1.9 points, 95% CI 0.1 to 3.8). Odds of ≥1 MCID increase were 2.6 for the United Kingdom (95% CI 1.2 to 5.7) but not significant for the United States (1.6, 95% CI 0.9 to 2.9) or Canada (1.4, 95% CI 0.7 to 2.5). Older age and adequate financial resources were associated with less continuous anxiety increase. Employment and shorter time since diagnosis were associated with lower odds of a ≥ 1 MCID increase.
Anxiety symptoms, but not depression symptoms, increased dramatically during COVID-19 among people with a pre-existing medical condition.
•We examined anxiety symptom changes from pre-COVID-19 to COVID-19.•Anxiety symptoms increased by >1 minimal clinically important difference.•Anxiety symptom changes differed substantially by country.•Depression symptoms changed only minimally and not statistically significantly.
OBJECTIVE: Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is a heterogeneous connective tissue disease that is typically subdivided into limited cutaneous SSc (lcSSc) and diffuse cutaneous SSc (dcSSc) depending on the ...extent of skin involvement. This subclassification may not capture the entire variability of clinical phenotypes. The European Scleroderma Trials and Research (EUSTAR) database includes data on a prospective cohort of SSc patients from 122 European referral centers. This study was undertaken to perform a cluster analysis of EUSTAR data to distinguish and characterize homogeneous phenotypes without any a priori assumptions, and to examine survival among the clusters obtained.METHODS: A total of 11,318 patients were registered in the EUSTAR database, and 6,927 were included in the study. Twenty-four clinical and serologic variables were used for clustering.RESULTS: Clustering analyses provided a first delineation of 2 clusters showing moderate stability. In an exploratory attempt, we further characterized 6 homogeneous groups that differed with regard to their clinical features, autoantibody profile, and mortality. Some groups resembled usual dcSSc or lcSSc prototypes, but others exhibited unique features, such as a majority of lcSSc patients with a high rate of visceral damage and antitopoisomerase antibodies. Prognosis varied among groups and the presence of organ damage markedly impacted survival regardless of cutaneous involvement.CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that restricting subsets of SSc patients to only those based on cutaneous involvement may not capture the complete heterogeneity of the disease. Organ damage and antibody profile should be taken into consideration when individuating homogeneous groups of patients with a distinct prognosis.
Scleredema (also called scleredema of Buschke) is a fibromucinous connective tissue disorder of unknown cause that belongs to a group of scleroderma-like disorders. We report the case of a ...64-year-old lady with long-standing scleredema, associated with a paraprotein, and progressing to multiple myeloma and AL amyloidosis. The relationship of scleredema with paraprotein and multiple myeloma is well established, but only two cases of scleredema associated with amyloidosis have been reported to date. We suggest that amyloidosis may be underdiagnosed in patients with scleredema and paraproteinaemia. Features attributed to extracutaneous manifestations of scleredema could represent systemic amyloidosis. We review published reports of scleredema associated with paraprotein and discuss the difficulties in the differential diagnosis of scleroderma-like disorders. We discuss the diagnosis of plasma cell dyscrasias and amyloidosis and their relevance in rheumatology practice.
Objective
To evaluate CAT‐192, a recombinant human antibody that neutralizes transforming growth factor β1 (TGFβ1), in the treatment of early‐stage diffuse cutaneous systemic sclerosis (dcSSc).
...Methods
Patients with SSc duration of <18 months were randomly assigned to the placebo group or to 1 of 3 CAT‐192 treatment groups: 10 mg/kg, 5 mg/kg, 0.5 mg/kg. Infusions were given on day 0 and weeks 6, 12, and 18. The primary objective of this study was to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of CAT‐192. Secondary outcomes included the modified Rodnan skin thickness score (MRSS), the Scleroderma Health Assessment Questionnaire, assessment of organ‐based disease, serum levels of soluble interleukin‐2 receptor, collagen propeptides (N propeptide of type I PINP and type III collagen), and tissue levels of messenger RNA for procollagens I and III and for TGFβ1 and TGFβ2.
Results
Forty‐five patients were enrolled. There was significant morbidity and mortality, including 1 death in the group receiving 0.5 mg/kg of CAT‐192 and 3 deaths in the group receiving 5 mg/kg of CAT‐192. There were more adverse events and more serious adverse events in patients receiving CAT‐192 than in those receiving placebo, although these events were not more frequent in the high‐dose treatment group. The MRSS improved in all groups during the study, but there was no evidence of a treatment effect for CAT‐192. Improvement in the MRSS correlated with the disease duration (r = −0.54, P = 0.0008). Changes in the PINP level from baseline correlated with changes in the MRSS (r = 0.37, P = 0.027).
Conclusion
We report the first evaluation of a systemically administered and repeatedly dosed anti‐TGFβ1 drug. In this pilot study, CAT‐192, in doses up to 10 mg/kg, showed no evidence of efficacy. The utility of clinical and biochemical outcome measures and the feasibility of multicenter trials of early dcSSc were confirmed.
Enrichment strategies from clinical trials for progressive systemic sclerosis-associated interstitial lung disease (SSc-ILD) have not been tested in a real-life cohort.
Do enrichment strategies for ...progressive ILD impact efficacy, representativeness, and feasibility in patients with SSc-ILD from the European Scleroderma Trials and Research (EUSTAR) database?
We applied the inclusion criteria of major recent SSc-ILD trials (Study of the Efficacy and Safety of Tocilizumab in Participants With Systemic Sclerosis focuSSced, Scleroderma Lung Study II SLS II, and Safety and Efficacy of Nintedanib in Systemic Sclerosis SENSCIS) and assessed progressive ILD, which was defined as absolute change in FVC and as significant progression (FVC decline ≥10%). Data were compared with all patients and with patients who did not fulfill any inclusion criteria.
In total, 2,258 patients with SSc-ILD were included: 31.2% of the patients met SENSCIS criteria; 5.8% of the patients met SLS II criteria; 1.6% of the patients met focuSSced criteria, and 67.7% (1,529) of the patients did not meet any criteria. In the first 12 ± 3 months, the absolute FVC decline in all patients and in patients who fulfilled criteria from SENSCIS was –0.1%, in patients who fulfilled criteria from focuSSced was –3.7%, and in patients who fulfilled criteria from SLS II was 2.3%, with accompanying more progressors in focuSSced. The patient populations that fulfilled the different study inclusion criteria significantly differed in various clinical parameters. In the second 12-month period, SENSCIS-enriched patients had a further absolute FVC% decline as described for the total cohort. In contrast, patients who fulfilled the focuSSced and SLS II criteria showed numeric improvement of lung function. There were no significant associations of enrichment criteria and ILD progression.
The application of enrichment criteria from previous clinical trials showed enrichment for progression with variable success, which led to selected patient populations reducing feasibility of recruitment. These findings are important for future clinical trial design and interpretation of the results of published trials.
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