| Literature DB >> 36120277 |
Harkirat Kaur1, Mohammad Alazzeh2, Abhay Thandavaram3, Aneeta Channar4, Ansh Purohit3, Bijay Shrestha1, Deepkumar Patel5, Hriday Shah3, Kerollos Hanna3, Lubna Mohammed3.
Abstract
Sjogren's syndrome is an autoimmune disorder of the body's exocrine glands; however, it is known to have numerous extra-glandular and endocrine manifestations in the body. Moreover, other autoimmune have also been reported with high prevalence in patients with Sjogren's syndrome, including thyroid diseases. Therefore in this study, we aimed to ascertain the increased risk of developing thyroid disorders in patients with pre-existing Sjogren's syndrome. The systematic review was conducted according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. Online searches on PubMed, PubMed Central (PMC), Google Scholar, and Cochrane were done till 5th June 2022 to filter out studies published in the last twenty years. Based on the inclusion-exclusion criteria, 167 studies were initially selected. They were screened and assessed by quality assessment tools that yielded seven studies, including one meta-analysis, three non-randomized control trials, and three systematic reviews. The study proved that patients with Sjogren's syndrome are at significant risk of developing thyroid disorders, especially autoimmune thyroiditis. This also highlights the need for advanced research and better diagnostic and screening protocols for these patients to reduce the seriousness of the disease.Entities:
Keywords: anti-ssa antibody; autoimmune disoders; autoimmune thyroid disorder; endocrinology; exocrine glands; internal medicine; sjogren's syndrome; thyroid disorder; thyroid gland; women’s health
Year: 2022 PMID: 36120277 PMCID: PMC9477098 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.28062
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
A summary of search strategies used in PubMed, PubMed Central, Google Scholar, and Cochrane
| Database | Keywords | Search strategy | Filters used | Results |
| PubMed | Sjogren's syndrome, Sicca syndrome, thyroid disorders, hypothyroidism, hyperthyroidism | (( "Sjogren's Syndrome/diagnosis"[Mesh] OR "Sjogren's Syndrome/epidemiology"[Mesh] OR "Sjogren's Syndrome/etiology"[Mesh] OR "Sjogren's Syndrome/genetics"[Mesh] OR "Sjogren's Syndrome/history"[Mesh] OR "Sjogren's Syndrome/immunology"[Mesh] OR "Sjogren's Syndrome/statistics and numerical data"[Mesh] )) AND ( "Thyroid Diseases/analysis"[Mesh] OR "Thyroid Diseases/complications"[Mesh] OR "Thyroid Diseases/epidemiology"[Mesh] OR "Thyroid Diseases/etiology"[Mesh] OR "Thyroid Diseases/genetics"[Mesh] OR "Thyroid Diseases/history"[Mesh] OR "Thyroid Diseases/immunology"[Mesh] OR "Thyroid Diseases/physiopathology"[Mesh] OR "Thyroid Diseases/prevention and control"[Mesh] OR "Thyroid Diseases/statistics and numerical data"[Mesh] ) - 297 | Published between 2002-2022 | 125 |
| PubMed Central | Sjogren's syndrome, thyroid disorders | "Sjogren's syndrome"[MeSH Major Topic] AND "thyroid diseases"[MeSH Major Topic] - 17 | No filters used | 17 |
| Google Scholar | Sjogren's syndrome, Sicca syndrome, thyroiditis, thyroid disorders, hypothyroidism, hyperthyroidism | Sjogren's syndrome and thyroid disorders - 12,000 | Published between 2002-2022 | 26 |
| Cochrane | Sjogren's syndrome, thyroid disease | Sjogren's syndrome and thyroid disease - 10 | No filters used | 1 |
Quality assessment tools used in the review and their scoring characteristics for selection criteria
SANRA: Scale for the Assessment of Narrative Review Articles [10]; AMSTAR: Assessment of Multiple Systematic Reviews [11]; PICO: Population, Intervention, Comparison, Outcome
| Quality assessment tool | Study type | Characteristics of assessment tool | Total score | Accepted score (>70%) | Accepted studies for this review |
| SANRA checklist | Narrative review articles | 6 items: the importance of the article for readership, statement of concrete aims of formulation of questions, literature search description, referencing, scientific reasoning, presentation of data | 12 | 9 | 4: Baldini et al. 2018 [ |
| AMSTAR 2 checklist | Systematic reviews | 16 items: inclusion of PICO, establishment of review methods prior to conducting the review and reports of deviations, explanation of study selections included in review, use of comprehensive search strategy, study selection in duplicate, extraction of data in duplicate, excluded studies and reason for exclusion, adequately detailed description of included studies, risk of bias included in the study, inclusion of funding sources, statistical combination of results in meta-analysis, impact of risk of bias by studies in the meta-analysis if included, risk of bias in the results of review, heterogeneity observed in the results of review, publication bias assessment, reports of conflict of interest | 16 | 12 | 3 : Sun et al. 2019 [ |
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram for the study
PRISMA: Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses [9]; PMC: PubMed Central; SANRA: Scale for the Assessment of Narrative Review Articles [10]; AMSTAR: Assessment of Multiple Systematic Reviews [11]
A list of the seven studies that were selected in this systematic review after screening
SS: Sjogren's syndrome, AITD: autoimmune thyroid disorder
| Author | Name of study | Publishing year | Type of study included in the review | Outcome of study |
| Baldini et al. [ | The association of Sjogren's syndrome and autoimmune thyroid disorders | 2018 | Literature review | The coexistence of SS and AITD is prevalent in clinical practice, most likely due to overlapping pathogenetic processes between the two diseases. |
| Tincani et al. [ | Novel aspects of Sjogren's syndrome in 2012 | 2013 | Literature review | Extraglandular symptoms continue to be a problem in the treatment of Sjogren's which requires more research |
| Lazarus et al. [ | Development of additional autoimmune diseases in a population of patients with primary Sjogren's syndrome | 2005 | Retrospective study | The most frequent autoimmune illness was hypothyroidism, which was found in 16 cases out of 114 (14%) |
| Kassan et al. [ | Clinical manifestations and early diagnosis of Sjogren's syndrome | 2004 | Literature review | The adoption of updated diagnostic criteria can aid in the early identification of people with SS |
| Sun et al. [ | Increased risk of thyroid disease in patients with Sjogren's syndrome: a systematic review and meta-analysis | 2019 | Systematic review and meta-analysis | Thyroid disease was shown to be more common in SS patients than in controls, suggesting that SS patients should be checked for thyroid disease |
| Lu et al. [ | Increased risk of primary Sjogren's syndrome in female patients with thyroid disorders: a longitudinal population-based study in Taiwan | 2013 | Retrospective study | A considerable rise in the incidence of SS among female thyroid disease patients, especially those in their mid-forties to mid-sixties |
| Dai et al. [ | Clinical features and laboratory examination results of Sjogren's syndrome complicated with thyroid disorders: a retrospective analysis | 2021 | Retrospective study | SS is frequently accompanied by hypothyroidism, and it has a physiological and pathological basis with autoimmune thyroid disorders |
Figure 2A similarity between the pathogenesis of Sjogren's syndrome and autoimmune thyroiditis has been briefly explained by this flowchart
T cell lymphocytic infiltration of the glands in both these autoimmune diseases is a hallmark feature which leads to dysfunction