Objective. Different sets of diagnostic criteria have been proposed for Sjogren's syndrome (SS), but none have been validated with a large series of patients or in a multicenter study. We conducted the present study involving 26 centers from 12 countries (11 in Europe, plus Israel), with the goals of reaching a consensus on the diagnostic procedures for SS and defining classification criteria to be used in epidemiologic surveys and adopted by the scientific community.Methods. The study protocol was subdivided into two parts. For part I, questionnaires regarding both ocular and oral involvement were developed; they in-
Selenium administration significantly improved quality of life, reduced ocular involvement, and slowed progression of the disease in patients with mild Graves' orbitopathy. (Funded by the University of Pisa and the Italian Ministry for Education, University and Research; EUGOGO Netherlands Trial Register number, NTR524.).
Objective-To develop criteria for disease activity in systemic sclerosis (SSc) that are valid, reliable, and easy to use. Methods-Investigators from 19 European centres completed a standardised clinical chart for a consecutive number of patients with SSc. Three protocol management members blindly evaluated each chart and assigned a disease activity score on a semiquantitative scale of 0-10. Two of them, in addition, gave a blinded, qualitative evaluation of disease activity ("inactive to moderately active" or "active to very active" disease). Both these evaluations were found to be reliable. A final disease activity score and qualitative evaluation of disease activity were arrived at by consensus for each patient; the former represented the gold standard for subsequent analyses. The correlations between individual items in the chart and this gold standard were then analysed. Results-A total of 290 patients with SSc (117 with diVuse SSc (dSSc) and 173 with limited SSc (lSSc)) were enrolled in the study. The items (including -factorsthat is, worsening according to the patient report) that were found to correlate with the gold standard on multiple regression were used to construct three separate 10-point indices of disease activity:
After 20 years of follow-up, 60% of patients treated with 131I for a single hyperfunctioning nodule are hypothyroid. Factors increasing the risk of hypothyroidism are age, 131I uptake and MMI pretreatment. The prognostic value of this last factor, however, depends on the degree of suppression of the extranodular thyroid parenchyma at the scan.
The objective of this work was to evaluate the clinical and serological profiles of patients with undifferentiated connective tissue diseases (UCTD) who had been followed for at least 1 year. The retrospective analysis (197495) was based on UCTD patients diagnosed on the basis of clinical manifestations suggestive of a connective tissue disease, and the presence of at least one non-organ-specific autoantibody. A total of 91 patients were evaluated. The condition of 79 remained stable during the follow up, while in 12 the UCTD evolved to systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) within a mean period of 3 years (min. 1 year, max. 8 years, median 2 years) after the onset of the disease. At baseline none of the variables, considered alone, showed an association with the future development of SLE. Multiple regression analysis, however, suggested that the association of sicca symptoms, Raynaud's phenomenon and/or photosensitivity was inversely correlated with the development of SLE (P = 0.0012, Fisher's exact test). The most common clinical manifestations of UCTD included arthritis, arthralgias, Raynaud's phenomenon, xerostomia, xerophthalmia and leukopenia. The stable UCTD patients showed a simple autoantibody profile characterized by a single autoantibody specificity in 82% of the cases 30% with anti-Ro/SSA alone and 28% with anti-RNP alone. This profile remained stable during the follow up. Anti-RNP antibodies alone correlated with the presence of Raynaud's phenomenon and arthritis (P < 0.001 and P < 0.01, respectively), while anti-Ro/SSA antibodies alone correlated with xerostomia and xerophthalmia (P < 0.01). In conclusion, the UCTDs in most of our patients seem to represent distinct clinical entities with a limited autoimmune repertoire rather than the early phases of definite connective tissue diseases. They could therefore provide an ideal model for the study of the clinico-serological correlations in autoimmune diseases.
Our results suggest that (a) a distinct subgroup of SLE patients exists, made up of younger patients with extensive, active lesions on renal biopsy, who are at higher risk for renal flares, (b) renal flares represent important predictors of doubling serum creatinine.
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