Literature DB >> 26184529

Lymphopenia in early arthritis: Impact on diagnosis and 3-year outcomes (ESPOIR cohort).

Carole Duquenne1, Divi Cornec1, Thierry Marhadour1, Sandrine Jousse-Joulin1, Alain Cantagrel2, Stephan Pavy3, Valérie Devauchelle-Pensec1, Alain Saraux4.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: In patients with early arthritis naive to disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs, we evaluated the prevalence of initial and persistent lymphopenia, underlying diagnoses, and risk of infection or malignancy.
METHODS: Eight hundred and thirteen patients with early arthritis included in the ESPOIR cohort had a clinical examination, laboratory tests (viral serology, immunological tests, and cytokine profile), and radiographs. We determined the prevalence of lymphopenia at baseline and after 3 years, associated factors, diagnoses, and risk of infection or malignancy.
RESULTS: At baseline, 50/813 (6.2%) patients had lymphopenia. Lymphopenia was associated with positive rheumatoid factor (P=0.02), cytopenia (P≤0.05), hepatitis C (P=0.05), higher C-reactive protein and DAS28 (P≤0.05 for both). Cytokine profile and radiological progression were not significantly different between patients with and without lymphopenia. Suspected diagnoses at inclusion were rheumatoid arthritis (RA, n=27), unclassified arthritis (n=15), systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE, n=3), spondyloarthritis (n=2), Sjögren's syndrome (n=1), hematologic disease (n=1), and fibromyalgia (n=1). Fifteen patients out of 42 (35.7%) with initial lymphopenia had persistent lymphopenia after 3 years, including 5 with documented causes (lupus, hepatitis C, undernutrition, azathioprine, and tamoxifen); none had PVB19, HIV, or HBV infection and none experienced infections, solid or hematologic malignancies during follow-up. Final diagnoses in these 15 patients were RA (n=6), unclassified arthritis (n=6), SLE (n=1), spondyloarthritis (n=1), and fibromyalgia (n=1).
CONCLUSIONS: Lymphopenia is rare in early arthritis. The most common rheumatic cause is RA, in which marked inflammation and other cytopenias are common. Lymphopenia in early arthritis is often short-lived, even when methotrexate is prescribed.
Copyright © 2015. Published by Elsevier SAS.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Diagnosis; Early inflammatory joint disease; Lymphopenia; Prognosis; Rheumatoid arthritis

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26184529     DOI: 10.1016/j.jbspin.2015.02.012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Joint Bone Spine        ISSN: 1297-319X            Impact factor:   4.929


  3 in total

1.  The association between the lymphocyte-monocyte ratio and disease activity in rheumatoid arthritis.

Authors:  Juping Du; Shuaishuai Chen; Jianfeng Shi; Xiaoli Zhu; Haijian Ying; Ying Zhang; Shiyong Chen; Bo Shen; Jun Li
Journal:  Clin Rheumatol       Date:  2017-09-14       Impact factor: 2.980

Review 2. 

Authors:  C Kneitz; J Atta; H Burkhardt
Journal:  Z Rheumatol       Date:  2017-10       Impact factor: 1.372

3.  Determination of etiology in patients admitted due to isolated leukopenia.

Authors:  Gulay Mart; Umit Y Malkan; Yahya Buyukasik
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2022-08-19       Impact factor: 1.817

  3 in total

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