The pathogenesis of rheumatoid arthritis (RA), similar to development of a majority of inflammatory and autoimmune disorders, is largely due to an inappropriate or inadequate immune response to environmental challenges. Among these challenges, infectious agents are the undisputed leaders. Since the 1870s, an impressive list of microorganisms suspected of provoking RA has formed, and the list is still growing. Although a definite causative link between a specific infectious agent and the disease has not been established, several arguments support such a possibility. First, in the absence of a defined pathogen, the spectrum of triggering agents may include polymicrobial communities or the cumulative effect of several bacterial/viral factors. Second, the range of infectious episodes (i.e., clinical manifestations caused by pathogens) may vary in the process of RA development from preclinical to late-stage disease. Third, infectious agents might not trigger RA in all cases, but trigger it in a certain subset of the cases, or the disease onset may arise from an unfortunate combination of infections along with, for example, psychological stress and/or chronic joint tissue microtrauma. Fourth, genetic differences may have a role in the disease onset. In this review, two aspects of the problem of “microorganisms and RA” are debated. First, is there an acquired immune deficiency and, in turn, susceptibility to infections in RA patients due to the too frequent and too lengthy infections, which at last break the tolerance of self antigens? Or, second, is there a congenital deficiency in tolerance and inflammation control, which may occur even with ordinary infection frequency and duration?
Pheochromocytoma and paraganglioma of childhood are rare neuroendocrine tumors. Urinary catecholamine measurements, metaiobenzylguanidine (MIBG) scanning, computed tomographic scanning, and magnetic resonance imaging have greatly facilitated diagnosis. Prognosis after surgical resection is excellent. In this retrospective series collected from French oncology centers, the risk of tumor progression was studied in order to assess prognostic factors and the optimal diagnostic and therapeutic management. Medical records of 24 children with paraganglioma were reviewed. This tumor occurred at a median age of 12.5 years and in most cases was revealed by arterial hypertension. The diagnosis was made by the demonstration of urinary excretion of catecholamines and their metabolites. Six patients had bilateral adrenal pheochromocytomas; two patients had extra-adrenal paragangliomas. In eight patients, the paraganglioma occurred as a familial disease. Surgical excision was the only therapeutic procedure. With a follow-up of 5.2 years, 14 of the patients are still in first complete remission and 6 have developed metastases or shown tumor progression. Despite a high long-term survival rate, the risk of malignancy and of multifocal involvement is of concern and is associated with a significant rate of late events. The outcome depends on adequacy of tumor resection and must be serially assessed.
Among patients with venous thromboembolism (VTE), the persistent detection of antiphospholipid (aPL) antibodies (Ab) represents an independent high risk factor for recurrence. However, oral anticoagulation vitamin K antagonist therapy, frequently used in these patients, is problematic in assessing and/or confirming a diagnosis of primary aPL syndrome (pAPS), suggesting use of alternative strategies. For this reason, and by analogy with other autoimmune diseases, a flow cytometer approach testing peripheral T cell subsets (CD3, CD4, and CD8), B cell subsets (B1, transitional, naive, and memory), and NK cells can be proposed. As an example and to validate the concept, pAPS patients selected from the monocentric VTE case-control EDITH's cohort were selected during their follow-up. As suspected and in contrast to non-APS VTE patients, other autoimmune diseases, and controls, pAPS VTE patients displayed specific lymphocyte disturbances. Quantitative and qualitative modifications were related to total CD4 T cell reduction, a lower CD4/CD8 ratio, and disturbance in B cell homeostasis with increased proportions of B1 cells, transitional B cells (CD24CD38), and naive B cells (IgDCD27), while memory B cells (IgDCD27 and IgDCD27) were reduced. Interestingly, the absolute number of CD4 T cells positively correlated with IgG anti-cardiolipin Ab levels. Altogether, disturbances of T and B cell homeostasis characterized pAPS VTE patients during their follow-up. This suggests a means of profiling that could be used in addition to existing criteria to characterize them.
Recent studies have reported that the pharmacokinetics of high-dose busulfan in bone marrow transplantation (BMT) are age-dependent: with the usual dosage of 16 mg/kg over 4 days, systemic exposure is two to four times lower in children than in adults. Data suggested that the dose of busulfan should rather be calculated on the basis of the body surface area (BSA). We measured plasma pharmacokinetics of busulfan in 27 children (mean age, 5.4 years) who were administered a new dosage of 600 mg/m2 over 4 days, ie, 17.8 to 29.2 mg/kg (mean, 24.8 mg/kg), using a gas chromatography-mass spectrometry assay. Our results demonstrate that, with this new dosage, systemic exposure is significantly increased in children compared with that achieved with the usual dosage of 16 mg/kg (6,404 +/- 2,378 v 3,918 +/- 1,170 ng.h/mL; P = .003). Moreover, there is no longer a significant difference in systemic exposure between children treated with this new dosage and adults given a dose of 16 mg/kg of busulfan. However, despite the use of a dosage normalized to the BSA, there is still a wide interindividual variation in systemic exposure, ranging from 3,566 to 13,129 ng.h/mL, which may account for the high incidence of venoocclusive disease (VOD) of the liver that we have already reported. The optimal dosage and schedule of busulfan in children requires a more individual approach that could be based on dose adjustment and plasma level monitoring.
To evaluate the effects of infectious episodes at early stages of rheumatoid arthritis (eRA) development, 59 untreated eRA patients, 77 first-degree relatives, from a longitudinal Tatarstan women cohort, were included, and compared to 67 healthy women without rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in their family history. At inclusion, informations were collected regarding both the type and incidence of infectious symptom episodes in the preceding year, and granulocyte reactive oxygen species (ROS) were studied at the basal level and after stimulation with serum-treated zymosan (STZ). In the eRA group, clinical [disease activity score (DAS28), health assessment questionnaire] and biological parameters associated with inflammation (erythrocyte sedimentation rate, C-reactive protein) or with RA [rheumatoid factor, anticyclic citrullinated peptide (anti-CCP2) antibodies] were evaluated. An elevated incidence of infection events in the previous year characterized the eRA and relative groups. In addition, a history of herpes simplex virus (HSV) episodes was associated with disease activity, while an elevated incidence of anti-CCP2 autoantibody characterized eRA patients with a history of viral upper respiratory tract infection symptoms (V-URI). Granulocyte ROS activity in eRA patients was quantitatively [STZ peak and its area under the curve (AUC)] and qualitatively (STZ time of peak) altered, positively correlated with disease activity, and parameters were associated with viral symptoms including HSV exacerbation/recurrence, and V-URI. In conclusion, our study provides arguments to consider a history of increased viral infection symptoms in RA at the early stage and such involvement needs to be studied further.
Abatacept is a fusion protein (CTLA4-Ig) and therapeutic molecule labeled for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Abatacept acts both by disrupting the CD28-mediated activation of T cells and by interacting with CD80/CD86 molecules present on antigen presenting cells such as monocytes and memory B cells. Accordingly and to evaluate clinical and biological parameters associated with response to abatacept, a retrospective monocentric study was conducted in 43 patients with RA, and the clinical response was evaluated at 6 months according to EULAR response criteria. Median age of the patients was 59.8 ± 15.1 years including 35 females and 8 males. At baseline, no difference was observed between non-responders (NR, n = 11), moderate responders (MR, n = 21), and good responders (GR, n = 11) to abatacept with regards to demographic, biological, and clinical characteristics of the patients (age, sex, anti-CCP, RF, FcγR3A V158F polymorphism, and C3/C4 complement reduction). Moreover, peripheral blood lymphocyte phenotyping was performed by flow cytometry revealing in 30 RA patients compared to controls (n = 45; median age 56.7 ± 13.5 years) that the initial CD19 B cell count was reduced in NR and MR but not in GR. No differences were observed with regards to total lymphocyte, T cell, and NK cell counts. Next, we further explored the effects of abatacept on B cell subsets (IgD/CD38 in panel 1 and IgD/CD27 in panel 2) and observed that the basal level of CD38 and/or CD27 memory B cell count was important for an abatacept response and that a selective effect of abatacept was observed on memory B cells after 6 months. In conclusion, and although these data need to be confirmed in an independent cohort, our data support a role for memory B cells in the mechanism of action of abatacept in RA.
Introduction: The aim of this study was to characterize infection events in a longitudinal cohort of first-degree relatives (FDR) of probands with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and explore their associations with RA development. To this end, newly diagnosed RA patients (n = 283), unaffected related FDR and age-matched healthy women were ascertained from the Caucasian triple women prospective Tatarstan cohort.Methods: In this cohort initiated in 1997, 26/283 (9.2%) FDR developed RA (incidence: 9.1 cases/1,000/year). At baseline and during the follow-up, information regarding infectious events (prevalence) and their incidence and duration per year were collected from all individuals.Results: Results reveal in the unaffected FDR developing RA subgroup: (i) a higher prevalence and/or incidence at baseline of upper respiratory infections (URI), otitis, tonsillitis, herpes reactivation, and skin infections; (ii) Mycoplasma sp detection was increased during pregnancy; (iii) a peak of infections started in the 3 years preceding RA onset, and thereafter decreased following RA diagnosis and treatment initiation with disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (DMARDs) when considering URI, and acute tonsillitis; (iv) herpes virus reactivation, at baseline, was associated with a higher report of morning stiffness and arthralgia while independent from rheumatoid factors and anti-citrullinated peptide (CCP)2 Ab positivity; and (v) infection events represent an independent environmental factor associated with RA development.Conclusion: In conclusion, an annual increase of respiratory tract infections was found at the pre-clinical stage of RA. This could be due to alterations in the immune system that result in susceptibility to infection, controlled by DMARDs, or that the infectious events predispose to RA.
Pruritus is a frequent symptom in systemic sclerosis (SSc), with a prevalence of 40-65%, but its pathophysiology is poorly understood. This study investigated the immunological component of pruritus. Fifty-six patients with SSc responded to a standardized questionnaire regarding both SSc disease and pruritus characteristics. Among patients with SSc, those with pruritus did not display a particular immunological profile (inflammatory, humoral, and/or cellular factors), but pruritus was, in most cases, concomitant with the development of SSc. Thus, pruritus characteristics were evaluated further, according to the detection of anti-centromere autoantibodies (ACA), into ACA+ (n = 17) and ACA- (n = 19). The ACA+ subgroup was characterized by a longer evolution of SSc and pruritus, pruritus present outside the sclerotic area, and a shorter daily duration of pruritus. In conclusion, the concomitant appearance of the 2 processes and the differences observed between ACA+ and ACA- subgroups support the presence of an immunological component in pruritus.
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