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SYSTEMIC LUPUS ERYTHEMATOSUS
        - AN OVERVIEW


                          - Dr. Parvez Khan
                       - Dr. Deepak Kapoor

                    Assistant Professors, M - 1
               Department of Internal Medicine
            Deccan College of Medical Sciences
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
Definition
  An inflammatory multi-system disease

  Immunologic aberrations:
   excessive auto-antibody production

  Tissue damage results from antibody and
   complement fixing immune complex deposition

  Wide spectrum of clinical presentations

  Characterized by remissions and exacerbations
Epidemiology

 SLE - recognized worldwide


 Prevalence in USA: 15-50  100,000 (1:2000)


 Incidence in USA: 1.8-7.6  100,000 year


 F:M   9:1 ( at age: 14-64 )

 Racial predisposition:
  x 3 more common in blacks
Epidemiology in the young and elderly


 Peak incidence is at age 15-40


  But: Onset may be at any age

 In pre-pubertal and post menopausal:
  female : male ratio 3:1
Genetic Epidemiology

  SLE is a multi-genic disease


  In < 5% of patients a single gene is responsible


  Homozygous deficiencies of early components
   of complement (C1q, C1r, C1s, C4, C2)
   predispose to SLE

  A null allele for C4A is the HLA-linked gene most
   consistently associated with susceptibility to SLE
Genetic Epidemiology

 HLA class II genes are associated with
   production of auto-antibodies

 TCR genes and Ig genes may contribute to
   susceptibility

 FC RIIA, FC RIIIA predispose to SLE in some
  ethnic groups
 (possibly responsible for impaired IC clearing)
Genetic Epidemiology

 concordance for monozygotic twins: 24-58%

 relatives of SLE patients have increased incidence of:
   - SLE
   - other auto-immune diseases
   - auto-antibodies

 ~ 10% of SLE patients have relatives with SLE

 males need more susceptibility genes
Importance of Sex hormones

  Female predominance (9:1)


  disease activity during menstrual period


  increased disease activity in pregnancy


  flares with oral contraceptive therapy


  abnormally rapid testosterone metabolism


  estrogenic metabolites persist longer
Environmental Factors

 Ultraviolet light ( UVB )

 Alfalfa sprouts, chemicals ( hydrazines) ?


 Drugs (Resprim = Trimethoprim + sulphamethoxazole)


 Infections (parvovirus, CMV, HCV )


 Smoking ( Discoid LE )
Defective Immune Regulation

 B cell and T cell hyperactivity leads to:
   T cell dependent auto-Ab production made in
   high quantity

 Subsets of auto-Abs and the Immune
  Complexes they form with Ag mediate tissue
  damage

 Defective clearance of Immune Complexes

 Defects in immune tolerance and apoptosis

 Defects in T and natural killer regulatory cells
Pathogenic auto-antibodies
Mechanisms of damage

 Direct binding to tissue via charge or
   cross-reactivity ( anti-DNA)

 Production of Immune Complexes leads to
   complement mediated damage

 Direct binding to cell membranes
   ( RBCs, Platelets)
Clinical Manifestations of SLE

 Constitutional
 non-specific but very common:

    - Fatigue
    - Fever
    - Weight Loss
Skin Manifestations
LE-specific lesions

 Acute:
   - malar “butterfly rash”
   - generalized erythema
   - bullous LE


 Subacute cutaneous lupus


 Chronic lupus:
   - localized discoid
   - generalized discoid
   - lupus profundus
Butterfly- malar rash
Generalized, photosensitive erythema
Bullous rash
Subacute cutaneous rash
psoriatiform        annular
Discoid rash
Skin Manifestations
LE-nonspecific lesions

   Panniculitis
   Urticarial lesions
   Vasculitis
   Livedo reticularis
   Oral lesions
   Non-scarring alopecia
Panniculitis
Vasculitis with finger tip ulcers
Livedo reticularis
Alopecia     (diffuse or patchy)

Non-scarring if part of SLE flare
Scarring if results from discoid
Skin biopsy:
Lupus band test = immunofluorescent staining of
IgG and complement deposits in dermo-epidermal junction
Skin biopsy - SLE dermatitis
Thickened epidermal basement membrane (large arrows)
Inflammatory infiltrates (small arrow)
Skin biopsy - Discoid lesion
Hyperkeratosis (small arrow)
Lymphoid infiltrates (thick arrow)
Fibrosis of deep dermis




                                     F
Musculoskeletal Manifestations

 Arthritis:
  - the most common manifestation of SLE
  - non-erosive, rarely deforming (Jaccoud’s deformity)
  - synovial fluid- mild inflammation
  - tenosynovitis-may be early manifestation



 Myopathy:
  - myositis = true inflammation
  - myopathy 2nd to drugs: steroids, anti-malarials
Jaccoud’s arthropathy
Renal Disease in SLE


   Proteinuria: 0.5 gr 24 hrs ( or > +3 )
   Urinary casts: RBC,granular,tubular,mixed
   Hematuria: > 5 RBC / high power field
   Pyuria: > 5 WBC / high power field




 prevalence: 30-65%
 in 3-6% renal disease is first manifestation
WHO Classification of Lupus Nephritis
J Am Soc Nephrol 15: 241-250, 2004

   Class I - Minimal mesangial LN
      (mesangial immune deposits seen by IF)


   Class II - Mesangial proliferative LN


   Class III- Focal proliferative LN
      (<50% of glomeruli with focal subendothelial immune deposits)


   Class IV - Diffuse proliferative segmental LN (IV-S)
                 - Diffuse proliferative global LN       (IV-G)
      (> 50% of glomeruli with subendothelial immune deposits)


   Class V - Membranous LN
      (global or segmental subepithelial deposits)         • Activity index
                                                           • Chronicity Index
   Class VI - Advanced sclerosing LN
      (> 90% of glomeruli globally sclerosed)
Renal disease in SLE
 Mild disease -    Class II
 Serious disease - Class III, IV, V

 Clinical course:

  - Class II:
    hematuria, sub-nephrotic proteinuria, preserved GFR

  - Class III and IV:
    edema, HTN
    nephritic sediment, mild-mod proteinuria, acute GFR

  - Class V:
    features of nephrotic syndrome, preserved/ gradual GFR
Serositis in SLE


  Pleuritis - occurs in 30-60% of patients


  Pericarditis - occurs in 20-30%


  Peritonitis
Cardiac Manifestations


 Pericarditis


 Myocarditis


 Endocarditis (Libman -Sacks endocarditis)

 Coronary heart disease
Pulmonary Manifestations

 Pleuritis

 Pneumonitis - acute or chronic

 Pulmonary hemorrhage - due to vasculitis

 Pulmonary hypertension

 Pulmonary embolism
Hematologic Manifestations

 Anemia:
  - in acute SLE:
    coomb’s positive hemolytic anemia
  - secondary to:
    chronic disease, CRF, blood loss, drugs.


 Leukopenia / Lymphopenia:
  - in active disease
  - secondary to drugs, infection
Hematologic Manifestations


 Thrombocytopenia:
  - anti-platelet abs- common, not always
    associated with thrombocytopenia

  - occurs in active SLE

  - may be isolated finding
    ( ~ 50,000 without serious bleeding )
Neuropsychiatric SLE

Central nervous system           Peripheral nervous system

-   Aseptic meningitis           - Guillain - Barre’ syndrome
-   Cerebrovascular disease      - Autonomic disorder
-   Demyelinating syndrome       - Mononeuropathy, single/multi
-   Headache (migraine, benign       plex
    intracranial pressure)       -   Myasthenia Gravis
-   Movement disorder (chorea)   -   Neuropathy, cranial
-   Myelopathy                   -   Plexopathyy
-   Seizure disorder             -   Polyneuropathy
-   Acute confusional state
-   Anxiety disorder
-   Cognitive dysfunction
-   Mood disorder                The American College of Rheumatology
-   Psychosis                    Nomenclature and case definitions for
                                 Neuropsychiatric lupus syndromes .
                                 Arthritis & Rheumatism 1999
Anti-Nuclear Antibodies (ANA)

 ANA : abs directed against nuclear antigens


 may occur in other systemic rheumatic diseases


 most frequent and highest in titer in SLE


 Positive in 98% of SLE patients


 detected by indirect immuno-fluorescence
Patterns of IF ANA staining

     Homogenous (diffuse) - dsDNA, histone
      SLE, drug induced SLE, RA

     Speckled
      MCTD, SLE, Sjogren, Systemic Sclerosis

     Nucleolar
      Systemic Sclerosis, Sjogren, SLE

     Rim (peripheral) - dsDNA histones
      characteristic of SLE
Patterns of Immuno-fluorescence ANA
staining
ANAs
ANA’s can be divided into:

 those directed against dsDNA


 those directed against ssDNA


 those directed against histones


 those directed against non-histone nuclear proteins :
  nucleic acid-protein complexes
AUTOANTIBODIES IN SLE:
 Autoantibody            Prevalence

    anti- ds DNA           50-60%
    anti- ss DNA           60-70%
    anti- Histones         70%
    anti- Sm ( Smith)      30%
    anti- RNP              35%
    anti- Ro ( SSA)        30%
    anti- La ( SSB)        15%
Anti DNA antibodies in SLE

  Anti ss- DNA:
   nonspecific and not in clinical use

  Anti-ds DNA: specific for SLE

     Clinical use important:
   - levels correlate with disease activity
   - presence and level associated with risk for
     renal disease
   - pathogenic effect mediated through direct
     binding to glomeruli or immune-complex
     mechanisms.
Clinical Associations of Auto-antibodies in SLE
  ANTIBODY        FREQUENCY % SPECIFICITY   CLINICAL
                                            SUBSET
  dsDNA           50-60       ++            Nephritis

  ssDNA           60-70       -

  Histones        70          +             Drug-induced LE

  Ro              30          +             Subactue
   La             15          +             cutaneous Lupus,
                                            Heart block
  Sm              30          ++            Nephritis,CNS

  RNP             10          +             MCTD

  Antiphospholipid 30-40                    Thrombosis
  antibodies                                Recurrent fetal
                                            loss
Diagnosis of SLE

  Based on a combination of clinical
   manifestations and laboratory findings
   which may occur simultaneously or serially

  Classification criteria are used for research
Classification criteria of SLE
Criterion               Definition
1. Malar Rash           - Fixed erythema, malar distribution
                        - Erythematous raised patches with
2. Discoid rash
                          scaling, atrophy, scarring
                        - Skin rash as result of sunlight
3.   Photosensitivity   - Oral nasopharyngeal, usually painless
4.   Oral ulcers        - Nonerosive, 2 or more joints
5.   Arthritis          - Pleuritis OR Pericarditis
6.   Serositis           -Proteinuria > 0.5gr or >+3 OR
                          cellular casts
7.   Renal disorder     - Seizures OR Psychosis

8. Neurologic           - Hemolytic anemia        OR
   disorder               Leukopenia < 4000/ mm3 OR
9. Hematologic            Lymphopenia <1500/mm3 OR
   disorder               Thrombocytopenia < 100.000/mm3
Classification criteria of SLE

Criterion                   Definition
10. Immunologic disorder    - anti-dsDNA OR
                            - anti- Sm        OR
                            - false positive VDRL /
                              anti-phospholipid antibody


11. Anti-nuclear antibody   Abnormal titer of ANA in
                            absence of drugs known to
                            cause DIL


 For diagnosis: any 4 of 11 criteria
MANAGEMENT OF SLE
The Challenge


  Treat Active Lupus


  Prevent Damage from:
    - Active lupus
    - Corticosteroids
    - Immunosuppressive agents
Treatment of active SLE
Organ System Approach

  Use the drug with the:
    - Least side effects
    - Lowest dose to control disease
    - Long term damage prevention

  Mild disease: Avoid Steroids
  Severe disease: Aggressive treatment
Treatments for SLE
    NSAIDs
    Corticosteroids
    Hydroxychloroquine (Plaquenil)
    Chloroquine (Aralen)                Antimalarials
    Quinacrine ( Mepacrine; Atabrine)

    Methotrexate
    Azathioprine
    Cyclophosphamide
    Cyclosporine
    Mycophenolate Mofetil (Cellcept)

  IVIG
  Thalidomide
Corticosteroids

 Effective for the suppression of all SLE
  manifestations

 NOT justified for Arthritis

 Moderate doses (20-30mg/d) sufficient for:
  pleuritis/pericarditis

 High doses (1mg/kg) required for:
  Nephritis, CNS disease, Severe hemolytic anemia
  or thrombocytopenia

 IV pulse 1g methylprednisolone sometimes used
  for refractory nephritis or life threatening disease
Corticosteroids- the price:

 Avascular Necrosis of Bone

 Osteoporosis with Fracture

 Hypertension, Hyperglycemia

 Premature Atherosclerosis

 Quality of life:
  Weight, Cushingoid Habitus, Mood changes
Anti-Malarials
Hydroxychloroquine, Chloroquine, Quinacrine


 Effective for the treatment of :
  Fatigue, Arthritis, Skin disease

 Prevents SLE flares


 Lowers cholesterol levels


 Anti-aggregant effect
Methotrexate


  May be effective as a steroid sparing agent in
   the treatment of:

   - arthritis

   - skin disease
Immunosuppressive agents
Azathioprine, Cyclophosphamide, Cyclosporine, Cellcept


 Used mainly for nephritis

 May be used for major organ involvement

 - Azathioprine: P.O. 2-3mgkg
 - Cyclophosphamide :
   IV pulses 0.5-1.0gr/m2 q month than q3 months for 2-3
  yrs
- Cyclosporine: P.O. 1-3mgkgd
- Mycophenolate Mofetil (Cellcept) : P.O. 1-3grd
Treatment of Lupus Nephritis

 Induction:
  - Corticosteroids
  - IV Cyclophosphamide  q month
  - Mycophenolate Mofetil (Cellcept) ?

 Maintenance:
  - IV Cyclophosphamide  q 3 mo
  - Azathioprine
  - Mycophenolate Mofetil ( Cellcept )
  - Cyclosporine
Cyclophosphamide side effects

 Infection
  - frequency - 45%
  - sequential infusions
  - WBC < 3000

 Premature ovarian failure
   - cumulative dose
   - age: < 25 yrs - 6%
           > 31 yrs - 67%

 Malignancy
  leukemia, gynecologic malignancies, bladder
Mycophenolate Mofetil ( MMF = Cellcept)

 Immunosuppressive for:
  kidney, liver and heart transplant

 Inhibitor of :
   Inosine Monophosphate (IMP) dehydrogenase
  - key enzyme in de novo purine synthesis
  - glycosylation of adhesion molecules in T and B cells

 Inhibits:
  -   proliferation of T and B lymphocytes
  -   production of abs
  -   generation of cytotoxic T cells
  -   recruitment of leukocytes to sites of inflammation
MMF or IV Cyclophosphamide for Lupus Nephritis
Ginzler et al. NEJM 2005


 140 pts class III, IV, V (24 week trial)

                     MMF (71 pts)           CTX (69 pts)
At 12 weeks:
- Complete remission         16                    4
- Partial remission:         21                   17

- Death                       0                    3
- Severe infections           1                    6
- Diarrhea                   15                    2


Conclusion:
- MMF more effective than CTX in inducing remission
- severe infections : less with MMF
Sequential Therapies for proliferative LN
Contreras G et al. NEJM 2004


 59 patients: class: III-12; IV-46; Vb-1

 Induction:
   IV CYC (0.5-1gr/m2) q mo for up to 7 pulses + steroids


 Maintenance (1-3 yrs):
   - IV CYC q 3 months
   - AZA 1-3 mg/kg/d
   - MMF 0.5-3 gr/d
Future possible treatments for SLE
    Treatments designed to effect specific processes

   LJP 394:      B cell toleragen: cross links anti-DNA receptors on B cells
   Anti IL-10: IL-10 is increased on correlates with disease activity
   Anti-CD40 ligand: prevents T cell activation
   CTLA4Ig: blocks CTLA4 on activated T cells from binding to B7 on B
    cells
 Anti C5 complement
 C1q immunoadsorption:             removes immune complexes


 Anti CD 20 (Rituximab):CD20 is B cells restricted ag- leads to B cell
    depletion


 Anti-BLyS: anti B Lymphocyte Stimulator protein which is elevated in SLE
Prognosis
Survival:
 90-95% at 2 years
 82-90% at 5 years
 71-80% at 10 years
 63-75% at 20 years

Poor prognostic factors:
- creatinine, nephrotic syndrome
- hypertension
- thrombocytopenia
- African- American race
- low socioeconomic status
Pregnancy and SLE

 1950s:
  - in SLE: pregnancy is not advised
  - termination should be offered

 1990s:
  - 10-30% flare during pregnancy / postpartum
  - most flares are minor
Pregnancy Outcomes in SLE
Johns Hopkins Cohort
 Fertility rates: normal
                   2-2.4 pregnanciespatient

 Preterm
  < 37 weeks            40.5%
  < 36 weeks            32.1%

 Pregnancy loss       10-30%
  1st trimester          6.0%
  2nd trimester          7.1%
The Mother in SLE

 Risk factors for exacerbation:
  - active disease 3-6 months before conception
  - pre-existing renal disease

 Conception during remission:
   10-30% risk of flare.

 Mild lupus rarely exacerbates in pregnancy

 Severe exacerbations: in 20% of pregnancies
Management of SLE flares in pregnancy
 Prednisone

 IV Pulse methylprednisolone

 NSAIDs ( during 1st trimester )

 Plaquenil

 Azathioprine

 Cyclosporine
THANK YOU

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Systemic lupus erythematosus overview

  • 1. SYSTEMIC LUPUS ERYTHEMATOSUS - AN OVERVIEW - Dr. Parvez Khan - Dr. Deepak Kapoor Assistant Professors, M - 1 Department of Internal Medicine Deccan College of Medical Sciences
  • 2. Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Definition  An inflammatory multi-system disease  Immunologic aberrations: excessive auto-antibody production  Tissue damage results from antibody and complement fixing immune complex deposition  Wide spectrum of clinical presentations  Characterized by remissions and exacerbations
  • 3. Epidemiology  SLE - recognized worldwide  Prevalence in USA: 15-50 100,000 (1:2000)  Incidence in USA: 1.8-7.6 100,000 year  F:M 9:1 ( at age: 14-64 )  Racial predisposition: x 3 more common in blacks
  • 4. Epidemiology in the young and elderly  Peak incidence is at age 15-40 But: Onset may be at any age  In pre-pubertal and post menopausal: female : male ratio 3:1
  • 5. Genetic Epidemiology  SLE is a multi-genic disease  In < 5% of patients a single gene is responsible  Homozygous deficiencies of early components of complement (C1q, C1r, C1s, C4, C2) predispose to SLE  A null allele for C4A is the HLA-linked gene most consistently associated with susceptibility to SLE
  • 6. Genetic Epidemiology  HLA class II genes are associated with production of auto-antibodies  TCR genes and Ig genes may contribute to susceptibility  FC RIIA, FC RIIIA predispose to SLE in some ethnic groups (possibly responsible for impaired IC clearing)
  • 7. Genetic Epidemiology  concordance for monozygotic twins: 24-58%  relatives of SLE patients have increased incidence of: - SLE - other auto-immune diseases - auto-antibodies  ~ 10% of SLE patients have relatives with SLE  males need more susceptibility genes
  • 8. Importance of Sex hormones  Female predominance (9:1)  disease activity during menstrual period  increased disease activity in pregnancy  flares with oral contraceptive therapy  abnormally rapid testosterone metabolism  estrogenic metabolites persist longer
  • 9. Environmental Factors  Ultraviolet light ( UVB )  Alfalfa sprouts, chemicals ( hydrazines) ?  Drugs (Resprim = Trimethoprim + sulphamethoxazole)  Infections (parvovirus, CMV, HCV )  Smoking ( Discoid LE )
  • 10. Defective Immune Regulation  B cell and T cell hyperactivity leads to: T cell dependent auto-Ab production made in high quantity  Subsets of auto-Abs and the Immune Complexes they form with Ag mediate tissue damage  Defective clearance of Immune Complexes  Defects in immune tolerance and apoptosis  Defects in T and natural killer regulatory cells
  • 11. Pathogenic auto-antibodies Mechanisms of damage  Direct binding to tissue via charge or cross-reactivity ( anti-DNA)  Production of Immune Complexes leads to complement mediated damage  Direct binding to cell membranes ( RBCs, Platelets)
  • 12. Clinical Manifestations of SLE Constitutional non-specific but very common: - Fatigue - Fever - Weight Loss
  • 13. Skin Manifestations LE-specific lesions  Acute: - malar “butterfly rash” - generalized erythema - bullous LE  Subacute cutaneous lupus  Chronic lupus: - localized discoid - generalized discoid - lupus profundus
  • 19. Skin Manifestations LE-nonspecific lesions  Panniculitis  Urticarial lesions  Vasculitis  Livedo reticularis  Oral lesions  Non-scarring alopecia
  • 23. Alopecia (diffuse or patchy) Non-scarring if part of SLE flare Scarring if results from discoid
  • 24. Skin biopsy: Lupus band test = immunofluorescent staining of IgG and complement deposits in dermo-epidermal junction
  • 25. Skin biopsy - SLE dermatitis Thickened epidermal basement membrane (large arrows) Inflammatory infiltrates (small arrow)
  • 26. Skin biopsy - Discoid lesion Hyperkeratosis (small arrow) Lymphoid infiltrates (thick arrow) Fibrosis of deep dermis F
  • 27. Musculoskeletal Manifestations  Arthritis: - the most common manifestation of SLE - non-erosive, rarely deforming (Jaccoud’s deformity) - synovial fluid- mild inflammation - tenosynovitis-may be early manifestation  Myopathy: - myositis = true inflammation - myopathy 2nd to drugs: steroids, anti-malarials
  • 29. Renal Disease in SLE  Proteinuria: 0.5 gr 24 hrs ( or > +3 )  Urinary casts: RBC,granular,tubular,mixed  Hematuria: > 5 RBC / high power field  Pyuria: > 5 WBC / high power field  prevalence: 30-65%  in 3-6% renal disease is first manifestation
  • 30. WHO Classification of Lupus Nephritis J Am Soc Nephrol 15: 241-250, 2004  Class I - Minimal mesangial LN (mesangial immune deposits seen by IF)  Class II - Mesangial proliferative LN  Class III- Focal proliferative LN (<50% of glomeruli with focal subendothelial immune deposits)  Class IV - Diffuse proliferative segmental LN (IV-S) - Diffuse proliferative global LN (IV-G) (> 50% of glomeruli with subendothelial immune deposits)  Class V - Membranous LN (global or segmental subepithelial deposits) • Activity index • Chronicity Index  Class VI - Advanced sclerosing LN (> 90% of glomeruli globally sclerosed)
  • 31. Renal disease in SLE  Mild disease - Class II  Serious disease - Class III, IV, V  Clinical course: - Class II: hematuria, sub-nephrotic proteinuria, preserved GFR - Class III and IV: edema, HTN nephritic sediment, mild-mod proteinuria, acute GFR - Class V: features of nephrotic syndrome, preserved/ gradual GFR
  • 32. Serositis in SLE  Pleuritis - occurs in 30-60% of patients  Pericarditis - occurs in 20-30%  Peritonitis
  • 33. Cardiac Manifestations  Pericarditis  Myocarditis  Endocarditis (Libman -Sacks endocarditis)  Coronary heart disease
  • 34. Pulmonary Manifestations  Pleuritis  Pneumonitis - acute or chronic  Pulmonary hemorrhage - due to vasculitis  Pulmonary hypertension  Pulmonary embolism
  • 35. Hematologic Manifestations  Anemia: - in acute SLE: coomb’s positive hemolytic anemia - secondary to: chronic disease, CRF, blood loss, drugs.  Leukopenia / Lymphopenia: - in active disease - secondary to drugs, infection
  • 36. Hematologic Manifestations Thrombocytopenia: - anti-platelet abs- common, not always associated with thrombocytopenia - occurs in active SLE - may be isolated finding ( ~ 50,000 without serious bleeding )
  • 37. Neuropsychiatric SLE Central nervous system Peripheral nervous system - Aseptic meningitis - Guillain - Barre’ syndrome - Cerebrovascular disease - Autonomic disorder - Demyelinating syndrome - Mononeuropathy, single/multi - Headache (migraine, benign plex intracranial pressure) - Myasthenia Gravis - Movement disorder (chorea) - Neuropathy, cranial - Myelopathy - Plexopathyy - Seizure disorder - Polyneuropathy - Acute confusional state - Anxiety disorder - Cognitive dysfunction - Mood disorder The American College of Rheumatology - Psychosis Nomenclature and case definitions for Neuropsychiatric lupus syndromes . Arthritis & Rheumatism 1999
  • 38. Anti-Nuclear Antibodies (ANA)  ANA : abs directed against nuclear antigens  may occur in other systemic rheumatic diseases  most frequent and highest in titer in SLE  Positive in 98% of SLE patients  detected by indirect immuno-fluorescence
  • 39. Patterns of IF ANA staining  Homogenous (diffuse) - dsDNA, histone SLE, drug induced SLE, RA  Speckled MCTD, SLE, Sjogren, Systemic Sclerosis  Nucleolar Systemic Sclerosis, Sjogren, SLE  Rim (peripheral) - dsDNA histones characteristic of SLE
  • 41. ANAs ANA’s can be divided into:  those directed against dsDNA  those directed against ssDNA  those directed against histones  those directed against non-histone nuclear proteins : nucleic acid-protein complexes
  • 42. AUTOANTIBODIES IN SLE: Autoantibody Prevalence  anti- ds DNA  50-60%  anti- ss DNA  60-70%  anti- Histones  70%  anti- Sm ( Smith)  30%  anti- RNP  35%  anti- Ro ( SSA)  30%  anti- La ( SSB)  15%
  • 43. Anti DNA antibodies in SLE  Anti ss- DNA: nonspecific and not in clinical use  Anti-ds DNA: specific for SLE Clinical use important: - levels correlate with disease activity - presence and level associated with risk for renal disease - pathogenic effect mediated through direct binding to glomeruli or immune-complex mechanisms.
  • 44. Clinical Associations of Auto-antibodies in SLE ANTIBODY FREQUENCY % SPECIFICITY CLINICAL SUBSET dsDNA 50-60 ++ Nephritis ssDNA 60-70 - Histones 70 + Drug-induced LE Ro 30 + Subactue La 15 + cutaneous Lupus, Heart block Sm 30 ++ Nephritis,CNS RNP 10 + MCTD Antiphospholipid 30-40 Thrombosis antibodies Recurrent fetal loss
  • 45. Diagnosis of SLE  Based on a combination of clinical manifestations and laboratory findings which may occur simultaneously or serially  Classification criteria are used for research
  • 46. Classification criteria of SLE Criterion Definition 1. Malar Rash - Fixed erythema, malar distribution - Erythematous raised patches with 2. Discoid rash scaling, atrophy, scarring - Skin rash as result of sunlight 3. Photosensitivity - Oral nasopharyngeal, usually painless 4. Oral ulcers - Nonerosive, 2 or more joints 5. Arthritis - Pleuritis OR Pericarditis 6. Serositis -Proteinuria > 0.5gr or >+3 OR cellular casts 7. Renal disorder - Seizures OR Psychosis 8. Neurologic - Hemolytic anemia OR disorder Leukopenia < 4000/ mm3 OR 9. Hematologic Lymphopenia <1500/mm3 OR disorder Thrombocytopenia < 100.000/mm3
  • 47. Classification criteria of SLE Criterion Definition 10. Immunologic disorder - anti-dsDNA OR - anti- Sm OR - false positive VDRL / anti-phospholipid antibody 11. Anti-nuclear antibody Abnormal titer of ANA in absence of drugs known to cause DIL For diagnosis: any 4 of 11 criteria
  • 49. The Challenge  Treat Active Lupus  Prevent Damage from: - Active lupus - Corticosteroids - Immunosuppressive agents
  • 50. Treatment of active SLE Organ System Approach  Use the drug with the: - Least side effects - Lowest dose to control disease - Long term damage prevention  Mild disease: Avoid Steroids  Severe disease: Aggressive treatment
  • 51. Treatments for SLE  NSAIDs  Corticosteroids  Hydroxychloroquine (Plaquenil)  Chloroquine (Aralen) Antimalarials  Quinacrine ( Mepacrine; Atabrine)  Methotrexate  Azathioprine  Cyclophosphamide  Cyclosporine  Mycophenolate Mofetil (Cellcept)  IVIG  Thalidomide
  • 52. Corticosteroids  Effective for the suppression of all SLE manifestations  NOT justified for Arthritis  Moderate doses (20-30mg/d) sufficient for: pleuritis/pericarditis  High doses (1mg/kg) required for: Nephritis, CNS disease, Severe hemolytic anemia or thrombocytopenia  IV pulse 1g methylprednisolone sometimes used for refractory nephritis or life threatening disease
  • 53. Corticosteroids- the price:  Avascular Necrosis of Bone  Osteoporosis with Fracture  Hypertension, Hyperglycemia  Premature Atherosclerosis  Quality of life: Weight, Cushingoid Habitus, Mood changes
  • 54. Anti-Malarials Hydroxychloroquine, Chloroquine, Quinacrine  Effective for the treatment of : Fatigue, Arthritis, Skin disease  Prevents SLE flares  Lowers cholesterol levels  Anti-aggregant effect
  • 55. Methotrexate  May be effective as a steroid sparing agent in the treatment of: - arthritis - skin disease
  • 56. Immunosuppressive agents Azathioprine, Cyclophosphamide, Cyclosporine, Cellcept  Used mainly for nephritis  May be used for major organ involvement - Azathioprine: P.O. 2-3mgkg - Cyclophosphamide : IV pulses 0.5-1.0gr/m2 q month than q3 months for 2-3 yrs - Cyclosporine: P.O. 1-3mgkgd - Mycophenolate Mofetil (Cellcept) : P.O. 1-3grd
  • 57. Treatment of Lupus Nephritis  Induction: - Corticosteroids - IV Cyclophosphamide q month - Mycophenolate Mofetil (Cellcept) ?  Maintenance: - IV Cyclophosphamide q 3 mo - Azathioprine - Mycophenolate Mofetil ( Cellcept ) - Cyclosporine
  • 58. Cyclophosphamide side effects  Infection - frequency - 45% - sequential infusions - WBC < 3000  Premature ovarian failure - cumulative dose - age: < 25 yrs - 6% > 31 yrs - 67%  Malignancy leukemia, gynecologic malignancies, bladder
  • 59. Mycophenolate Mofetil ( MMF = Cellcept)  Immunosuppressive for: kidney, liver and heart transplant  Inhibitor of : Inosine Monophosphate (IMP) dehydrogenase - key enzyme in de novo purine synthesis - glycosylation of adhesion molecules in T and B cells  Inhibits: - proliferation of T and B lymphocytes - production of abs - generation of cytotoxic T cells - recruitment of leukocytes to sites of inflammation
  • 60. MMF or IV Cyclophosphamide for Lupus Nephritis Ginzler et al. NEJM 2005 140 pts class III, IV, V (24 week trial) MMF (71 pts) CTX (69 pts) At 12 weeks: - Complete remission 16 4 - Partial remission: 21 17 - Death 0 3 - Severe infections 1 6 - Diarrhea 15 2 Conclusion: - MMF more effective than CTX in inducing remission - severe infections : less with MMF
  • 61. Sequential Therapies for proliferative LN Contreras G et al. NEJM 2004  59 patients: class: III-12; IV-46; Vb-1  Induction: IV CYC (0.5-1gr/m2) q mo for up to 7 pulses + steroids  Maintenance (1-3 yrs): - IV CYC q 3 months - AZA 1-3 mg/kg/d - MMF 0.5-3 gr/d
  • 62. Future possible treatments for SLE Treatments designed to effect specific processes  LJP 394: B cell toleragen: cross links anti-DNA receptors on B cells  Anti IL-10: IL-10 is increased on correlates with disease activity  Anti-CD40 ligand: prevents T cell activation  CTLA4Ig: blocks CTLA4 on activated T cells from binding to B7 on B cells  Anti C5 complement  C1q immunoadsorption: removes immune complexes  Anti CD 20 (Rituximab):CD20 is B cells restricted ag- leads to B cell depletion  Anti-BLyS: anti B Lymphocyte Stimulator protein which is elevated in SLE
  • 63. Prognosis Survival:  90-95% at 2 years  82-90% at 5 years  71-80% at 10 years  63-75% at 20 years Poor prognostic factors: - creatinine, nephrotic syndrome - hypertension - thrombocytopenia - African- American race - low socioeconomic status
  • 64. Pregnancy and SLE  1950s: - in SLE: pregnancy is not advised - termination should be offered  1990s: - 10-30% flare during pregnancy / postpartum - most flares are minor
  • 65. Pregnancy Outcomes in SLE Johns Hopkins Cohort  Fertility rates: normal 2-2.4 pregnanciespatient  Preterm < 37 weeks 40.5% < 36 weeks 32.1%  Pregnancy loss 10-30% 1st trimester 6.0% 2nd trimester 7.1%
  • 66. The Mother in SLE  Risk factors for exacerbation: - active disease 3-6 months before conception - pre-existing renal disease  Conception during remission: 10-30% risk of flare.  Mild lupus rarely exacerbates in pregnancy  Severe exacerbations: in 20% of pregnancies
  • 67. Management of SLE flares in pregnancy  Prednisone  IV Pulse methylprednisolone  NSAIDs ( during 1st trimester )  Plaquenil  Azathioprine  Cyclosporine