| Literature DB >> 35650373 |
Elena K Joerns1, Traci N Adams2, Jeffrey A Sparks3, Chad A Newton2, Bonnie Bermas4, David Karp4, Una E Makris4,5.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: This narrative review will focus on the role of the rheumatologist in evaluating patients with interstitial lung disease (ILD) without a defined rheumatic disease and will outline the current classification criteria for interstitial pneumonia with autoimmune features (IPAF) and describe what is known regarding IPAF pathobiology, natural history, prognosis, and treatment. Lastly, knowledge gaps and opportunities for future research will be discussed. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Interstitial lung disease; Interstitial pneumonia with autoimmune features; Pulmonary rheumatology collaboration; Rheumatologist evaluation
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35650373 PMCID: PMC9159646 DOI: 10.1007/s11926-022-01072-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Rheumatol Rep ISSN: 1523-3774 Impact factor: 4.686
Classification criteria for “interstitial pneumonia with autoimmune features” [6]
1. Presence of an interstitial pneumonia (by HRCT or surgical lung biopsy), and 2. Exclusion of alternative etiologies, and 3. Does not meet criteria of a defined rheumatic disease, and 4. At least one feature from at least two of these domains: A. Clinical domain B. Serologic domain C. Morphologic domain | ||
| Clinical domain | Serologic domain | Morphologic domain |
1. Distal digital fissuring (i.e., “mechanic hands”) 2. Distal digital tip ulceration 3. Inflammatory arthritis or polyarticular morning joint stiffness ⩾60 min 4. Palmar telangiectasia 5. Raynaud’s phenomenon 6. Unexplained digital edema 7. Unexplained fixed rash on the digital extensor surfaces (Gottron sign) | 1. ANA ⩾1:320 titer, diffuse, speckled, homogeneous patterns or a. ANA nucleolar pattern (any titer) or b. ANA centromere pattern (any titer) 2. Rheumatoid factor ⩾2× upper limit of normal 3. Anti-CCP 4. Anti-dsDNA 5. Anti-Ro (SSA) 6. Anti-La (SSB) 7. Anti-ribonucleoprotein 8. Anti-Smith 9. Anti-topoisomerase (Scl-70) 10. Anti-tRNA synthetase (e.g., Jo-1, PL-7, PL-12; others are: EJ, OJ, KS, Zo, tRS) 11. Anti-PM-Scl 12. Anti-MDA-5 | 1. Suggestive radiology patterns by HRCT (see text for descriptions): a. NSIP b. OP c. NSIP with OP overlap d. LIP 2. Histopathology patterns or features by surgical lung biopsy: a. NSIP b. OP c. NSIP with OP overlap d. LIP e. Interstitial lymphoid aggregates with germinal centers f. Diffuse lymphoplasmacytic infiltration (with or without lymphoid follicles) 3. Multi-compartment involvement (in addition to interstitial pneumonia): a. Unexplained pleural effusion or thickening b. Unexplained pericardial effusion or thickening c. Unexplained intrinsic airways disease# (by PFT, imaging or pathology) d. Unexplained pulmonary vasculopathy |
HRCT, high-resolution computed tomography; ANA, antinuclear antibody; NSIP, non-specific interstitial pneumonia; OP, organizing pneumonia; LIP, lymphoid interstitial pneumonia; PFT, pulmonary function testing. #includes airflow obstruction, bronchiolitis, or bronchiectasis
Adapted from: Fischer, A., et al., An official European Respiratory Society/American Thoracic Society research statement: interstitial pneumonia with autoimmune features. Eur Respir J, 2015. 46(4): p. 976–87
Serum biomarkers with potential diagnostic and prognostic utility in IPAF
| Biomarker | Reference | Study design | IPAF subjects ( | Comparison group ( | Results |
| IL-4 | Liang [ | Cross-sectional | 38 | Non-IPAF IIP (81), COPD (36), HC (101) | • Significantly higher in IPAF than in non-IPAF IIP, COPD, and HC |
| IL-6 | Liang [ | Cross-sectional | 38 | Non-IPAF IIP, COPD, HC | • Significantly higher in IPAF than in non-IPAF IIP • Significantly higher in IPAF and non-IPAF IIP than in COPD, HC |
| Kameda [ | Retrospective | 35 | IPF (51), RD-ILD (16) | • Significantly higher in RD-ILD than in IPAF | |
| IL-10 | Kameda [ | Retrospective | 35 | IPF, RD-ILD | • Significantly higher in IPAF and RD-ILD than in IPF |
| Liang [ | Cross-sectional | 38 | Non-IPAF IIP, COPD, HC | • Significantly higher in IPAF than in non-IPAF IIP • Significantly higher in IPAF and non-IPAF IIP than in COPD, HC | |
| IL-13 | Liang [ | Cross-sectional | 38 | Non-IPAF IIP, COPD, HC | • Significantly higher in IPAF than in non-IPAF IIP, COPD, and HC |
| IL-17 | Liang [ | Cross-sectional | 38 | Non-IPAF IIP, COPD, HC | • Significantly higher in IPAF than in non-IPAF IIP, COPD, and HC |
| CXCL13 | Xue [ | Retrospective | 27 | Non-IPAF IIP (23); IPF (19); pneumonia (20); HC (15) | • No significant difference between IPAF and IPF or other IIPs • Level in IIPs significantly higher than in pneumonia or HC • Inversely correlated with DLCO in IIPs |
| CCL2 | Xue [ | Retrospective | 27 | Non-IPAF IIP; IPF; pneumonia; HC | • No significant difference between IPAF and IPF or other IIPs • Level in IIPs significantly higher than in pneumonia or HC • Inversely correlated with DLCO in IIPs |
| Th17 cytokine profile* | Ramos-Martinez [ | Prospective | 33 | Part of a cohort of ILD patients with anti-tRNA autoantibodies (85% IPAF) (39) | • Levels significantly higher at follow-up in patients who progressed as compared to non-progressors at follow-up in 6 months • No baseline cytokine levels predicted disease progression at follow-up |
| CXCL1 | Liang [ | Cross-sectional | 38 | Non-IPAF IIP, COPD, HC | • Significantly higher in IPAF than in non-IPAF IIP • Significantly higher in IPAF and non-IPAF IIP than in COPD and HC • Negative correlation of level with DLCO • Positive correlation with ESR and Fibmax score • Correlated with ongoing acute exacerbations or future exacerbation within the next 6 months |
| CXCL9 | Kameda [ | Retrospective | 35 | IPF, RD-ILD | • Significantly higher in RD-ILD than in IPAF • Strong positive correlation of baseline level with treatment responsiveness (FVC during and after treatment) • Distinguished RD-ILD from IPAF and IPF with moderate accuracy |
| CXCL10 | Kameda [ | Retrospective | 35 | IPF, RD-ILD | • Significantly higher in RD-ILD than in IPAF • Significantly higher in IPAF than in IPF • Low accuracy in distinguishing IPAF from IPF • Weak negative correlation with FVC • Distinguished RD-ILD from IPAF and IPF with moderate accuracy |
| CXCL11 | Kameda [ | Retrospective | 35 | IPF, RD-ILD | • Significantly higher in RD-ILD than in IPAF • Significantly higher in IPAF than in IPF • Moderate accuracy in distinguishing RD-ILD from IPAF and IPF • Low accuracy in distinguishing IPAF from IPF • Weak negative correlation with FVC • Pre-treatment level showed strong positive correlation with treatment responsiveness (by annual FVC) |
| KL-6 | Wang [ | Retrospective | 64 | Non-fibrotic lung disease (41)** | • Higher level in IPAF compared to non-fibrotic lung disease • Negative correlation with DLCO • Inverse correlation with change in FVC and DLCO • In IPAF patients with progressive disease, post-treatment level was increased significantly compared to pre-treatment level • In patients with improvement, levels decreased after treatment |
| Yamakawa [ | Retrospective | 50 | Non-IPAF fibrotic NSIP (25) | • Baseline level higher in IPAF than non-IPAF fibrotic NSIP • Negative correlation of baseline level with DLCO • KL-6 change did not differ significantly between stable and progressive IPAF patients | |
| Xue [ | Retrospective | 27 | Non-IPAF IIP; IPF; pneumonia; HC | • Significantly higher in IPAF than in non-IPF IIP, but did not differ significantly from IPF • Level in IIPs significantly higher than in pneumonia or HC • Inversely correlated with DLCO | |
| Xue [ | Prospective | 65 | HC (30) | • KL6 was higher in IPAF than in healthy controls • Significant negative correlation with FVC/DLCO • Higher baseline and follow-up (52 weeks) level in IPAF patients with disease progression compared to patients with stable/improved disease | |
| SP-A | Wang [ | Retrospective | 64 | Non-fibrotic lung disease** | • Increased level in IPAF compared to in non-fibrotic lung disease • Negative correlation with DLCO • Inverse correlation with change in FVC and DLCO • In IPAF patients with progressive disease, post-treatment level was increased significantly compared to pre-treatment level • In patients with improvement, levels decreased after treatment |
| Xue [ | Retrospective | 27 | Non-IPAF IIP; IPF; pneumonia; HC | • No significant difference between IPAF and IPF or other IIPs • Level in IIPs significantly higher than in pneumonia or HC • Inversely correlated with DLCO in IIPs • Negative correlation with FVC and FEV1 | |
| Xue [ | Prospective | 65 | HC | • Higher in IPAF than in healthy controls • Negative correlation with DLCO • Higher baseline and follow-up (52 weeks) level in IPAF patients with disease progression compared to patients with stable/improved disease | |
| SP-D | Yamakawa [ | Retrospective | 50 | Non-IPAF fibrotic NSIP | • Negative correlation of baseline levels with DLCO • No significant difference between stable and progressive IPAF patients |
| Xue [ | Retrospective | 27 | Non-IPAF IIP; IPF; pneumonia; HC | • No significant difference between IPAF and IPF or other IIPs • Level in IIPs significantly higher than in pneumonia or HC | |
*IL-1b, IL-4, IL-6, IL-10, IL-17A, IL-18, IL-22, GM-CSF (granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor), and TNF-a (tumor necrosis factor alpha)
**COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease), lung cancer, bacterial pneumonia, eosinophilic pneumonia, bronchiectasis, chronic bronchitis, emphysema, asthma, granuloma, pulmonary tuberculosis
IPAF, interstitial pneumonia with autoimmune features; IL, interleukin; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; HC, healthy controls; IIP, idiopathic interstitial pneumonia; RD, rheumatic disease; IPF, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis; CXCL, C-X-C motif chemokine ligand; DLCO, diffusing capacity of lung for carbon monoxide; CCL, C-C motif chemokine ligand; tRNA, transfer ribonucleic acid; ESR, erythrocyte sedimentation rate; FVC, forced vital capacity; KL-6, Krebs von den Lungen 6; NSIP, non-specific idiopathic pneumonia; SP-A, surfactant protein A; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in first second; SP-D, surfactant protein D
Rheumatologist approach to evaluation of patient with ILD and autoimmune features
| History/review of systems* | *After excluding other RDs |
• Joint pain, number of joints involved, duration of symptoms • Morning joint stiffness for ≥60 minutes • Swelling in fingers or toes • Unexplained rashes • Cold induced color changes in fingers or toes • Ulceration on tips of digits • Sharp shooting chest pain • Unexplained swelling in legs/feet or abdomen • Premature graying (≤30 years) • Acid reflux symptoms or difficulty swallowing • History of fluid around the heart or lungs • Family history of liver cirrhosis or pulmonary fibrosis | |
| Clinical Exam** | **In addition to excluding exam features consistent with other RDs |
• Synovitis • Objective weakness in upper and lower extremities, neck flexors, and extensors • Cracking/roughening around the edges of fingers and hands (particularly radial side) or toes/feet • Papules on extensor surfaces of extremities (Gottron papules) • Rash on extensor surfaces of extremities (Gottron sign) • Digital pitting • Digital ulceration • Palmar telangiectasias • Puffy fingers | |
| Laboratory Testing*** | ***In addition to performing other necessary testing based on history and clinical exam |
| • CBC with differential, CMP, urinalysis | |
| • ESR, CRP | |
| • CK, aldolase | |
| • ANA by immunofluorescence (pattern and titer) | No need to repeat testing if already done by Pulmonary |
| • RF, CCP | |
| • SSA, SSB, Ro52, Ro60 | |
| • dsDNA, Smith | |
| • Scl-70, RNP | |
| • PM-Scl. MDA-5 | |
| • Anti-synthetase antibodies (Jo-1, PL-7, PL-12, EJ, OJ, KS) | |
ILD, interstitial lung disease; RD, rheumatic disease; CBC, complete blood count; CMP, comprehensive metabolic panel; ESR, erythrocyte sedimentation rate; CRP, c-reactive protein; CK, creatine kinase; ANA, antinuclear antibody; RF, rheumatoid factor; CCP, cyclic citrullinated peptide; SSA, Sjogren’s-syndrome-related antigen A; SSB, Sjogren’s-syndrome-related antigen B; dsDNA, double-stranded deoxyribonucleic acid; RNP, ribonucleoprotein; PM-Scl, polymyositis-scleroderma; MDA-5, melanoma differentiation-associated protein 5.