| Literature DB >> 33208192 |
Christelle Darrieutort-Laffite1, Catherine Ansquer2, Hélène Aubert3, Françoise Kraeber-Bodéré2, Agathe Masseau4, Christian Agard4, Mohamed Hamidou4, Claire Bernier3, Jean-Marie Berthelot5, Benoit Le Goff5, Sébastien Barbarot3, Antoine Néel4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To report on the characteristics and long-term course of rheumatic manifestations in Schnitzler syndrome (SchS).Entities:
Keywords: Bone lesions; Bone scan; Interleukin 1 receptor antagonist; Schnitzler syndrome
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33208192 PMCID: PMC7677784 DOI: 10.1186/s13075-020-02318-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arthritis Res Ther ISSN: 1478-6354 Impact factor: 5.156
Fig. 1Study flow chart
Fig. 2Cutaneous, rheumatic, and systemic clinical presentation of 25 patients with Schnitzler syndrome. a Representative example of typical rash in 7 patients. b Relationship between rheumatic and systemic symptoms. c History of symptom appearance prior to SchS diagnosis in 23 patients with detailed information. d Distribution of pain in 18 patients with clinical rheumatic involvement
Patients’ characteristics (n = 25)
| Patients' characteristics | N (%) or median (IQR) |
|---|---|
| Male/Female | 16/9 |
| Age at disease onset (years) | 63 (54–72) |
| Diag delay (months) | 25 (13–67) |
| Rash | 25 (100) |
| Monoclonal component | 24 (100) |
| IgMκ | 19 (76) |
| IgMκ+Mλ | 2 (8) |
| IgMκ+Gκ | 1 (4) |
| IgMλ | 1 (4) |
| IgGλ | 2 (8) |
| Rheumatic | 21 (88) |
| Joint/bone pain | 18 (75) |
| Abnormal imaging | 19 (79) |
| Fatigue | 18 (75) |
| Fever | 15 (63) |
| Weight loss | 14 (58) |
| Lymphadenopathy | 7 (29) |
| CRP (mg/L) | 80 (50–134) |
| Hemoglobin (g/dL) | 11,4 (3, 8–13) |
| Platelet (G/L) | 375 (294–468) |
| Leucocytes (G/L) | 10,6 (1, 8–14) |
Values indicate median (IQR) or n (%)
Fig. 3Bone scan findings in 18 patients. a Distribution of bone lesions [6]. b Representative example of long bones (patients 1–3 and 6) and/or pelvic bone involvement (patients 4–6) and selected cases with femoral (*) or pelvic (†) osteosclerosis on SPECT-CT. c Correlations between disease activity and bone scan features for patients without anti-IL1 treatment (Spearman)
Fig. 4Schnitzler syndrome treatment impact on bone scan findings. a Unpaired comparison of bone scan scores according to patients’ treatments. b Representative example of the impact of therapy on bone scan images (0, none; Col, colchicine; Cs, corticosteroids). c Clinical score, CRP level, and scintigraphic score changes according to therapy
Fig. 5Long-term follow-up of 24 patients: comparison of clinico-biological data before IL1Ra initiation to last follow-up data of IL1Ra-treated and IL1Ra-naïve (“other”) patients. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001