| Literature DB >> 23556533 |
Angela Tincani1, Laura Andreoli, Ilaria Cavazzana, Andrea Doria, Marta Favero, Maria-Giulia Fenini, Franco Franceschini, Andrea Lojacono, Giuseppe Nascimbeni, Amerigo Santoro, Francesco Semeraro, Paola Toniati, Yehuda Shoenfeld.
Abstract
Sjögren's syndrome (SS) is a systemic progressive autoimmune disease characterized by a complex pathogenesis requiring a predisposing genetic background and involving immune cell activation and autoantibody production. The immune response is directed to the exocrine glands, causing the typical 'sicca syndrome', but major organ involvement is also often seen. The etiology of the disease is unknown. Infections could play a pivotal role: compared to normal subjects, patients with SS displayed higher titers of anti-Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) early antigens, but lower titers of other infectious agent antibodies such as rubella and cytomegalovirus (CMV) suggest that some infections may have a protective role against the development of autoimmune disease. Recent findings seem to show that low vitamin D levels in patients with SS could be associated with severe complications such as lymphoma and peripheral neuropathy. This could open new insights into the disease etiology. The current treatments for SS range from symptomatic therapies to systemic immunosuppressive drugs, especially B cell-targeted drugs in cases of organ involvement. Vitamin D supplementation may be an additional tool for optimization of SS treatment.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23556533 PMCID: PMC3616867 DOI: 10.1186/1741-7015-11-93
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Comparisons between the 2002 and 2012 criteria for Sjögren’s syndrome (SS)
| (I) Ocular symptoms (positive response to at least one of three): | (I) Ocular symptoms: |
| Daily, persistent, troublesome eyes for more than 3 months | Not included |
| Recurrent sensation of sand or gravel in the eyes | |
| Use of tear substitutes more than three times per day | |
| (II) Oral symptoms (positive response to at least one of three): | (II) Oral symptoms: |
| Daily feeling of dry mouth for more than 3 months | Not included |
| Recurrently or persistently swollen salivary glands as an adult | |
| Frequent drinking of liquids to aid in swallowing food | |
| (III) Ocular signs (positive result for at least one of two tests): | (III) Ocular signs: |
| Schirmer’s test, performed without anesthesia (≤5 mm in 5 minutes) | Keratoconjunctivitis sicca with ocular staining score ≥3, according to Whitcher |
| Rose Bengal score or other ocular dye score (≤4 according to van Bijsterveld’s scoring system) | |
| (IV) Histopathology in minor salivary gland biopsy: | (IV) Histopathology in minor salivary gland biopsy: |
| Focal lymphocytic sialoadenitis, with focus score ≥1 (a focus is defined as ≥50 lymphocytes per 4 mm2 of glandular tissue adjacent to normal appearing mucous acini) | Focal lymphocytic sialadenitis, with a focus score ≥1 (a focus is defined as ≥50 lymphocytes per 4 mm2 of glandular tissue adjacent to normal appearing mucous acini) |
| (V) Salivary gland involvement (positive result for at least one of three): | (V) Salivary gland involvement: |
| Unstimulated whole salivary flow (≤1.5 ml/15 minutes) | Not included |
| Parotid sialography showing the presence of diffuse sialectasis (punctuate, cavitary or destructive pattern), without evidence of obstruction in the major ducts | |
| Salivary scintigraphy showing delayed uptake, reduced concentration and/or delayed excretion of tracer | |
| (VI) Autoantibodies: | (VI) Autoantibodies: |
| Presence in the serum of antibodies to Ro (SS-A) or La (SS-B) antigens, or both | Positive serum anti-SS-A/Ro and/or anti-SS-B/La or (positive rheumatoid factor and anti-nuclear antibody (ANA) titer ≥1:320) |
| Classification criteria: | Classification criteria: |
| Primary SS: | At least two of the three items in order to classify a patient as SS |
| The presence of any four of the six items, as long as either item IV (histopathology) or item VI (serology) is positive | |
| The presence of any three of the four objective criteria (items III, IV, V and VI) | |
| Secondary SS: | |
| In the presence of another connective tissue disease, the presence of item I or item II, plus any two from items III, IV and V | |
| Exclusion criteria: | Exclusion criteria: |
| Past head and neck radiation treatment, hepatitis C infection, AIDS, pre-existing lymphoma, sarcoidosis, graft versus host disease, use of anticholinergic drugs (since a time shorter than fourfold the half-life of the drug) | History of head and neck radiation treatment, hepatitis C infection, AIDS, sarcoidosis, amyloidosis, graft versus host disease, IgG4-related disease |
Figure 1Severe ocular surface damage in a dry eye patient.
Figure 2Dry eye classification flow chart (Dry Eye Workshop Report, 2007) [19]. The causes of ‘dry eye syndrome’ are subdivided into aqueous-deficient and evaporative groupings. Sjögren’s syndrome (SS) belongs to the first group. Modified from [19].
Figure 3Lissamine green staining of the conjunctiva in dry eye syndrome.
Figure 4Microscopy of a minor salivary gland in Sjögren’s syndrome (SS): ‘periductal lymphoid focus’. The finding of at least 1 focus (periductal aggregate of at least 50 lymphocytes, mostly CD4+) in 4 mm2 of tissue is diagnostic for SS. The ‘score’ is the number of foci in 4 mm2 of tissue.
Figure 5Microscopy of non-Hodgkin’s (NH) marginal B cell lymphoma. The most frequent lymphoma in Sjögren’s syndrome (SS) is the NH marginal B cell type, which comes from mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT).
Figure 6Anti-CD20 staining of non-Hodgkin’s (NH) marginal B cell lymphoma. The lymphoid infiltrate is constituted by medium-sized cells, with a cleaved nucleus and a large cytoplasm, which are factors strongly positive for CD20.
Studies including patients affected with Sjögren’s syndrome (SS) treated with rituximab
| Somer | 1 | Case report | Marginal zone lymphoma, xerophthalmia, xerostomia | Improvement in corneal staining, Schirmer’s test, salivary flow rate, tear production, salivary pooling, diminished parotid enlargement | No AE reported |
| Voulgarelis | 4 | Case reports | Marginal zone lymphoma, parotid gland enlargement, lymphadenopathy, cryoglobulinemia, purpura, peripheral neuropathy, arthralgia | Improvement in lymphoma, arthralgia, cryoglobulinemia, purpura, peripheral neuropathy (50%) | No AE reported |
| Gottenberg | 6 | Retrospective | 2 MALT lymphomas, 2 vasculitis with cryoglobulinemia, 2 parotid gland enlargement and articular involvement | Improvement in parotid swelling, subjective dryness, fatigue and vasculitis in 5 out of 6 patients | 1 serum sickness, 1 infusion reaction |
| Pijpe | 15 | Open label | 8 early primary SS and 7 MALT lymphoma: 8 parotid gland swelling, 8 Raynaud’s phenomenon, 13 fatigue, 11 arthralgia, 2 pulmonary involvement, 2 vasculitis | Remission of lymphoma in 3 of 7 patients, disease stability in 3 of 7, progression in 1. Increased salivary secretion, improvement in the rose Bengal score and tear, BUT, mouth dryness, arthralgia. No improvement on Schirmer test. | 2 infusion reactions, 1 Herpes zoster |
| Ring | 1 | Case report | Distal renal tubular acidosis, xerostomia with mouth ulcerations | Xerostomia improvement | No AE reported |
| Seror | 16 | Retrospective | 5 lymphoma, 2 pulmonary involvement, 2 polysynovitis, 5 mixed cryoglobulinemia, 1 thrombocytopenia, and 1 mononeuritis multiplex | Remission of lymphoma in 4 of 5 patients; improvement of systemic involvements in 9 of 11, subjective dryness in 5 of 16, and regression of keratitis in 2 of 11. No response on salivary flow and Schirmer test. | 2 infusion reactions, 1 serum sickness |
| Devauchelle-Pensec | 16 | Open label | Sicca symptoms, pain, fatigue; 1 pulmonary involvement | Improvement in subjective fatigue, pain, dryness, and pulmonary involvement. No changes in unstimulated salivary flow, salivary gland score and ophthalmologist evaluation. | 3 infusion reactions, 1 serum sickness |
| Dass | 8 (PL 9) | RCT | Fatigue, ocular and mouth dryness; no systemic involvement | Improvement in fatigue, general health and SF-36. No improvement on Schirmer test and salivary flow rate. | 2 infusion reactions, 1 delayed reaction with meningism, 1 gastroenteritis and palpitation |
| Galarza | 8 | Open label | Severe glandular and musculoskeletal involvement, cutaneous vasculitis | Improvement in parotid swelling, articular involvement, fatigue, and subjective dryness in 4 of 7 patients | 3 AE: 2 infusion reactions |
| Ramos-Casals | 15 | Registry | 6 lymphoma, 4 neurological involvement, 2 hematological involvement, 1 refractory glomerulonephritis, arthritis, and protein-losing enteropathy | Complete response in 67% of patients, partial response in 20%, no response in 13% | 1 urinary tract infection, 1 interstitial pneumonitis |
| Meijer | 20 (PL 10) | RCT | 15 arthralgia, 6 arthritis, 2 renal involvement, 1 peripheral neuropathy, 11 Raynaud’s phenomenon, 17 tendomyalgia, 6 vasculitis, thyroid dysfunction | Improvement in saliva flow rate, stimulated lacrimal gland function; but not in BUT and Schirmer test. Improvement in SF-36 and MFI. Improvement in extraglandular manifestations. | 1 serum sickness, 12 infections in 11 patients on rituximab vs 7 infections in 4 patients on placebo |
| Mekinian | 17 | Registry | All peripheral nervous system involvement: 10 patients with cryoglobulinemia and/or vasculitis, 7 patients without cryoglobulinemia and/or vasculitis | Response in 9 of 10 patients with cryoglobulinemia and/or vasculitis, and in 2 of 7 without cryoglobulinemia and/or vasculitis | 6 (35%) AE: 2 mild arterial hypertension, 1 infusion reaction, 1 cutaneous infection, CMV infection, hypogammaglobulinemia |
AE, adverse event; BUT, break-up time; CMV, cytomegalovirus; MALT, mucose-associated lymphoid tissue; MFI, multidimensional fatigue inventory; PL, placebo; RCT, randomized controlled trial; SF-36, Short Form 36 Health Survey.