| Literature DB >> 36166150 |
Luca Seitz1,2, Pascal Seitz3, Roxana Pop4, Fabian Lötscher3.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: To provide a comprehensive overview of the spectrum of large and medium vessel vasculitis in adults with primary vasculitides, arthritides, connective tissue, and fibroinflammatory diseases as well as vasculitis mimics, for an efficient differential diagnosis and initial diagnostic approach. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Aortitis; Arthritis; Connective tissue disease; Differential diagnosis; Fibroinflammatory disease; Vasculitis
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36166150 PMCID: PMC9513304 DOI: 10.1007/s11926-022-01086-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Rheumatol Rep ISSN: 1523-3774 Impact factor: 4.686
Variable definitions of vessel sizes
| Small vessels | Medium vessels | Large vessels | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chapel Hill 2012 nomenclature [ | Intraparenchymal arteries, arterioles, capillaries, venules, and veins | Main visceral arteries and veins and their initial branches | Aorta and its major branches and analogous veins |
| Cardiovascular pathology viewpoint [ | Arterioles, capillaries, venules | Small- and medium-sized arteries throughout the body (including both distributing and intraparenchymal arteries) | Aorta and aortic arch branches, distributing arteries of the extremities and neck |
| Dermatopathology viewpoint [ | Arterioles, capillaries, post-capillary venules (found both in the dermis and subcutis) | Small arteries or small veins (diameter <800 μm, four to eight medial muscular layers without distinct tunica adventitia) found in the subcutis or dermal-subcutis junction | (not present in skin) |
| Neuroradiology viewpoint [ | Cerebral arteries with lumen diameter < 0.75 mm (e.g., lenticulostriate artery) | Cerebral arteries with lumen diameters of 0.75–2.0 mm (M3/4-, A2-5, and P2-5- segments of middle, anterior and posterior cerebral arteries; posterior inferior, anterior inferior and superior cerebellar arteries; M2- and A1/P1-segments are usually also considered medium sized) | Internal carotid, vertebral and basilar artery, M1-segment of middle cerebral artery |
| Daily practice (rheumatology) (iii) | Arterioles, capillaries, venules, small intraparenchymatous Arteries and veins (e.g., retinal arteries with diameter of approximately 0.15 mm) | Remaining muscular arteries and corresponding veins (including splanchnic and renal vessels) | All elastic arteries and “large” distributing muscular arteries and corresponding veins (aorta, main pulmonary, Brachiocephalic, common/internal carotid, vertebral, subclavian, axillary, brachial, common and external/internal iliac, femoral, popliteal) |
(i) For vessel size classification, the text refers to a figure intended to represent medium and large vessels; however, it remains unclear which vessels are effectively classified as large or medium. (ii) In neuroradiology, the definitions of vessel sizes are influenced by thrombectomy trials (imaging with digital subtraction angiography); the use of 7-Tesla MRI will probably influence these definitions in the future, as the image resolution is constantly improving. (iii) Because the diameters of basilar, renal, cephalic, common hepatic and the proximal mesenteric arteries are often similar to the smaller vessels of the “large artery” category (i.e., brachial, popliteal, internal iliac, vertebral), this classification remains arbitrary
Mimics of medium or large vessel vasculitis
| Mainly arterial dilatation or aneurysm formation | Mainly arterial stenosis or occlusion | Potentially mixed presentation: Dilatation/aneurysm formation and/or stenosis/occlusion |
|---|---|---|
| Marfan’s syndrome (LV/MV) | Transient perivascular inflammation of the carotid artery syndrome (LV) (i) | Atherosclerosis (LV/MV) |
| Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (LV/MV) | Embolic diseases (e.g., cholesterol emboli, cardiac myxoma) (MV) | Radiation-induced vasculopathy (LV/MV) |
| Loeys-Dietz syndrome (LV/MV) | Sickle cell disease (MV) | Erdheim-Chester disease (LV/MV) |
| Osteogenesis imperfecta (LV/MV) | Hypercoagulable states (including livedoid vasculopathy, cryofibrinogenemia, thrombotic microangiopathies, or antiphospholipid syndrome) (MV) | Hypereosinophilic syndromes (LV/MV) |
| Familial non-syndromic aortic aneurysm and dissection syndrome (LV) | Drug-induced occlusion, esp. digital artery (cocaine/amphetamine, chemotherapy etc.) (MV) | Segmental arterial mediolysis (MV) |
| Calciphylaxis (MV) | Neurofibromatosis (LV/MV) | |
| Primary hyperoxaluria (MV) | Fibromuscular dysplasia (LV/MV) | |
| Primary amyloidosis (MV) | Cutis laxa (LV/MV) | |
| Malignancy of the vessel wall (e.g., aortic intimal sarcoma) (LV) | Fabry disease (LV/MV) | |
| Malignant infiltration of the vessel wall (LV/MV) | Hyperhomocysteinemia (LV/MV) | |
| Intravascular lymphoma (MV) | Direct mechanic trauma to vessel (LV/MV) (e.g., Hypothenar-hammer syndrome) | |
| Pseudoxanthoma elasticum (LV/MV) | Dissection/intramural hematoma (LV/MV) | |
| Moyamoya disease/syndrome (LV/MV) | Periarterial inflammation (e.g., pancreatitis, infection) (LV/MV) | |
| Reversible cerebral vasoconstriction syndrome (MV) | Post-stenotic aneurysms (MV) | |
| Cerebral vasospasm after trauma/SAH (MV) | ||
| Mid-aortic syndrome (LV) | ||
| Coarctation of the aorta (LV) | ||
| Congenital arterial hypoplasia (e.g., vertebral artery) or stenosis (e.g., pulmonary artery) (LV/MV) | ||
| Thoracic outlet syndrome (LV) |
(i) Classification as a vasculitis mimic is controversial because of the presence of inflammatory wall infiltrates. MV medium vessels, LV large vessels, SAH subarachnoid hemorrhage
Primary vasculitides, arthritides, connective tissue, and fibroinflammatory diseases causing medium and large vessel vasculitis in adults
| Category/disease | Epidemiology, patient characteristics | Mainly affected large and medium vessels or vessel beds (i) | Clinical manifestations (ii) | Associated laboratory findings | Diagnostic pearls and pitfalls (iii) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Large | Medium | |||||
| Primary vasculitides | ||||||
| Giant cell arteritis | Usually > 50 (> 40) Y/A; f > m (3:1); ↑ Northern European ancestry and northern latitude; common (incidence ~10/10^5/y in population >50 Y/A) [ | ‡ Aorta and all direct large branches, supraaortal (subclavian, axillary, brachial) > lower extremities (iliac, femoral, popliteal) [ | ‡ Head/neck (any artery, esp. TA, facial, occipital, ophthalmic) +/- Mesenteric, renal, lateral/internal thoracic, infrabrachial, infrapopliteal, coronary, cerebral, ovarian, uterine, breast, skin, liver, testes [ | Headache, scalp tenderness, abnormal TA (palpation), polymyalgia, jaw/limb claudication, arterial bruits, decreased pulse, blood pressure-difference, visual loss, double vision, fever, weight loss, dry cough, vertigo/hearing loss, stroke, pericarditis, mononeuritis, plexopathy [ | CRP or ESR ↑ > 95%, rarely both →; thrombocytosis (usually < 800 G/L), mild anemia ~ 50%, mild leukocytosis ~ 20%; liver enzymes 2–4× ↑ (GGT/AP > AST/ALT) ~ 20% [ | • Imaging findings of TA do not allow differentiation between different types of vasculitides • Screen for GCA in the context of pathological vessel wall imaging of the proximal intracranial arteries • Think of GCA with CRP ↑ and unclear liver enzyme elevation, dry cough, pericarditis, or fever of unknown origin |
| Takayasu Arteritis | Usually < 40 Y/A (< 60); f > m (3:1); ↑ Japan, West Asia (similar worldwide); very rare (incidence ~ 1–2/10^6/y); potentially associated: SPA/IBD [ | ‡ Aorta, subclavian, CCA, ICA, vertebral, axillary, brachial, iliac, femoral +/- pulmonary, popliteal [ | ‡ renal, mesenteric +/- coronary, celiac, proximal intracranial, ophthalmic [ | Fatigue, arthralgia, myalgia, fever, arterial bruits, reduced pulse, blood pressure difference, limb claudication, carotidodynia, headache, hypertension, dizziness, syncope, stroke, mesenteric ischemia, uveitis/scleritis, myocardial infarction, skin lesions [ | CRP or ESR ↑ ~ 70% at initial diagnosis; mild anemia ~ 30%; other findings (mild thrombocytosis or leukocytosis, creatinine ↑ in renal artery stenosis) [ | • Normal ESR/CRP does not exclude TAK • Screen for IBD (fecal calprotectin) and assess IgG/A/M levels (common variable immunodeficiency?) [ • Typical angiographic patterns: involvement of the abdominal vessels, symmetric aortic arch disease, or focal disease [ |
Polyarteritis nodosa | Usually 40–60 Y/A (childhood to senescence); m > f (~ 1.5:1); ↑ Caucasians (classical type); very rare (incidence: classical type ~ 1/10^6/y, any type ~ 1–8/10^6/y in Europe) [ | +/- ICA, vertebral, (very rare: femoral, aorta (vasa vasorum)) [ | ‡ Muscle, skin (incl. digital arteries), renal, any gastrointestinal (mesenteric, hepatic, splenic etc.), peripheral nerves, testicular +/- TA, coronary, ocular, ovary, uterus, cerebral [ | Weight loss, myalgias, arthralgia, fever, hypertension mononeuritis multiplex, livedo/ulcers/nodules, scant purpura, renal/bowel infarction or bleeding, orchitis, multifocal myositis, myocarditis, pericarditis, pancreatitis, stroke, subarachnoid hemorrhage (aneurysms), pachymeningitis, retinal vasculitis, scleritis, uveitis, keratitis, pleural effusion [ | CRP ↑ and /or ESR >30 mm/1h in ~ >75% (normal esp. in localized forms); non-glomerular hematuria/proteinuria; mild to moderate eosinophilia and anemia; creatinine ↑; AST/ALT →/↑; ANCA and cryoglobulins →; C3/4 →/↑; CK rarely ↑ [ | • Esp. in young adults, consider testing for ADA2-deficiency • If histology shows affection of capillaries or venules, PAN is not the likely diagnosis (arterioles are rarely affected) • Digital subtraction angiography remains the most sensitive imaging for microaneurysms and medium vessel vasculitis • Deep excisional biopsy of a non-ulcerated skin nodule, a combined nerve/muscle or muscle biopsy are ideal specimens |
| Kawasaki disease | Usually young children, very rarely 18–50 Y/A; f = m; ↑ Japan and East Asia (rest of world much rarer); incidence in adults unknown [ | ‡ aorta, CCA, subclavian, axillary, brachial, iliac, pulmonary [ | ‡ Coronary, renal, mesenteric, hepatic, splenic +/- lower leg, cerebral, testicular, muscle [ | Fever, unspecific rash, conjunctival injection, cheilitis, strawberry tongue, erythema of hands/feet, periungual desquamation, lymphadenopathy, arthralgia; chest pain (coronary aneurysm, myocarditis, pericarditis, pleuritis); hepatitis (jaundice), pancreatitis, colitis, stroke, aseptic meningitis, cranial nerve palsy [ | CRP ↑↑, rarely → with late presentations; common (leukocytosis, thrombocytosis, hyperferritinemia, moderate liver enzyme ↑); occasional (eosinophilia, sterile leukocyturia) [ | • Differential diagnosis: infections (esp. Epstein-Barr-virus, parvovirus, human immunodeficiency virus, Streptococcus, SARS-Cov2), consider causes of coronary aneurysms [ • SARS-Cov2-induced multisystem inflammatory syndrome can result in a Kawasaki-like presentation in young adults [ |
ANCA-associated vasculitis | Usually > 40–50 Y/A (rare in children, more common with increasing age); f ≈ m; incidence all subtypes (~ 25/10^6/y), EGPA ~ 1–4/10^6 [ | +/- aorta (incl. periaortitis), ICA [ | +/- TA (symptoms can be like GCA), muscle, coronary, cerebral, ocular, hepatic, mesenteric, gastric (splanchnic vessel rarely with aneurysms and rupture) [ | MPA/GPA/EGPA: constitutional symptoms, arthralgia, lung fibrosis or hemorrhage, GN, purpura, neuropathy, peri-myocarditis, bowel ischemia/ulcers, polychondritis, digital gangrene, meningitis, stroke, scleritis, retinitis, keratitis, rhinosinusitis, sialadenitis. GPA: mass lesions, nasal septal perforation, otitis, subglottic stenosis, pachymeningitis. EGPA: asthma (>95%). [ | CRP ↑ (rarely → in localized forms); creatinine ↑, active sediment (GN); IgG4 often ↑; eosinophilia frequent (EGPA ↑↑); PR3- or MPO-ANCA ↑ >85% in GPA/MPA (→ in localized forms); EGPA: ANCA ↑ ~ 35% (MPO >> PR3); IgE/ECP ↑ [ | • In high probability situations with negative ANCA, a repeat immunoassay using a different platform should be performed • Eosinophilic pleural and pericardial effusions occur in EGPA • ANCA is not 100% specific: e.g., a patient with supraaortic large artery vasculitis with low-titer ANCA still more likely has GCA • Because IgG4 elevation is common in AAV, it should always be included in its differential diagnosis. |
| Cryoglobulinemic vasculitis | Usually 40–70 Y/A (childhood to senescence); f > m (~ 2:1); rare disease (unknown incidence); primary/secondary ~ 20/80% (infections, autoimmune diseases (esp. Sjogren’s, SLE, RA), lymphoproliferation) [ | +/- aorta (vasa vasorum, very rare) [ | +/- “PAN-like” distribution (especially skin, nerve, muscle, gastrointestinal) [ | Palpable purpura, livedo, ulcers/necrosis of skin, digital gangrene, Raynaud’s, arthralgia, arthritis, GN, polyneuropathy, mononeuritis multiplex, stroke, cerebral vasculitis (small vessels), bowel ischemia, myelitis, pulmonary hemorrhage [ | CRP/ESR ↑ (can be →); monoclonal or mixed cryoglobulins detectable; mild anemia; C4 ↓ ~ 70-90%; RF often ↑↑ (rarely →); active urinary sediment (GN); serum immunofixation (paraprotein?) [ | • Immunoglobulins can be spuriously low due to cryoglobulins • Always extensively screen for secondary causes in CV • Direct immunofluorescence of acute skin lesions often reveals deposits of IgM > IgG > IgA, and/or complement • CV can mimic IgA-vasculitis (usually monoclonal IgA) • Cryoglobulins are common in hepatitis C without CV |
| Cogan’s syndrome | Usually 18–40 Y/A (described 2–81y); f = m; worldwide (most cases published Caucasian); very rare (unknown incidence); potential association with IBD [ | ‡ Aorta (esp. ascending), CCA, subclavian; +/- Vertebral, axillary, iliac, femoral, popliteal [ | +/- Tibial, peroneal, renal, splenic, mesenteric, coronary [ | Interstitial keratitis, Menière-like symptoms, scleritis, uveitis, episcleritis; in minority of cases: fever, weight loss, fatigue, arthralgia/myalgia, testicular pain, unspecific rash, splenomegaly, pericarditis, pleuritis, Raynaud’s; headache, aseptic meningitis, encephalitis, cranial/peripheral neuropathy [ | CRP or ESR ↑ ~ 75–90%; leukocytosis ~ 75% (rarely > 20 × 10^9/L), mild anemia/thrombocytosis ~ 30%; rare: mild eosinophilia, low titers of RF or ANA [ | • In patients without the classical symptom combination (interstitial keratitis and Menière-like symptoms), the risk for misdiagnosis is high and the important differential diagnoses should be considered thoroughly: BS, polychondritis, IBD, sarcoidosis, Susac syndrome, Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada disease, AAV, infections (Whipple, Lyme, Chlamydia) |
| Behçet’s syndrome | Usually onset 2nd to 3rd decade (occurs from childhood to late adulthood); m = f; prevalence variable (high in regions with ↑ HLA-B51 positivity - Southwest Asia, Mediterranean region); vascular disease ~ 5–40% of all BS (↑ young males) [ | Veins (thrombosis): ‡ lower extremity veins; +/- vena cava, subclavian Arteries (aneurysms): ‡ Pulmonary (typically with aneurysms), abdominal aorta, CCA, iliac, femoral, popliteal; +/-Subclavian, axillary, brachial. [ | Veins: ‡ Every size and location possible (also superficial thrombophlebitis) +/- Cerebral veins/dural sinuses Arteries: +/- Mesenteric, renal, splenic, coronary aneurysms (all rare) [ | General: bipolar aphthosis, uveitis (typically bilateral, anterior- to panuveitis), retinal vasculitis, cutaneous (papulopustulosis, erythema nodosum), pathergy (specific), abdominal pain, arthralgia and arthritis, CNS-symptoms (parenchymatous or vascular disease). Vascular disease associated with: constitutional symptoms, venous thrombosis, Budd-Chiari syndrome, CVST with seizures and cerebral hemorrhage, hemoptysis due to pulmonary artery aneurysms. [ | No specific histologic or laboratory findings. CRP and ESR usually ↑; calprotectin ↑ in gastrointestinal disease; HLA-B51 positive ~ 50–60% (of limited aid in diagnosis) | • Vascular manifestations typically occur within first 5 years • Hughes-Stovin syndrome should be evaluated as BS • Thrombosis commonly occurs without embolism • Cardiac involvement is rare but possible (intracardiac thrombosis, coronary aneurysms, endocarditis) • Repeated occlusion of vascular stents, despite proper anticoagulation, should lead to consideration of BS |
| Connective tissue diseases | ||||||
Systemic lupus erythematosus | Usually in child-bearing age (occasionally > 50 Y/A); mean age in vasculitis ~ 38 y; f >> m; worldwide (non-Caucasians ↑); incidence SLE ~ 1-25/10^5/y; any type of vasculitis in ~ 11–35% of SLE [ | +/- Aorta, iliac (occasional “TAK-like” distribution supraaortal and iliac/femoral) [ | +/- “PAN-like” (skin, mesenteric, coronary, peripheral nerves, gallbladder, kidney, pancreas, muscle), cerebral [ | Vasculitis: Skin (palpable purpura, livedo, panniculitis, ulcers, digital ischemia, urticaria); gastrointestinal (abdominal pain, mesenteritis, enteritis, pancreatitis, cholecystitis, bowel ischemia/necrosis and hemorrhage of small > large bowel, pancreatitis); heart (myocardial infarction, aneurysms); nervous system (mononeuritis, mononeuritis multiplex, stroke, seizures) [ | CRP →/ ↑, ESR ↑; cytopenias of all cell lineages common; C3/4 →/↓; creatinine ↑, proteinuria, active sediment (GN); IgG →/ ↑; ANA ↑; antibodies →/ ↑ (SSA/B, Sm, RNP, dsDNS, histone, C1q, RF, nucleosomes, APS-antibodies) [ | • Vasculitis usually coincides with highly active phases of SLE, and can be the presenting feature in < 20% • Screening for cryoglobulins should always be performed • Non-vasculitic vasculitis mimics need to be considered in SLE, particularly in the CNS (sequelae of APS or Libman-Sacks endocarditis, accelerated atherosclerosis and thrombocytopenic thrombotic purpura) |
| Sjogren’s syndrome | Usually 30–60 Y/A (occurs from childhood to senescence); f >> m (~ 10:1); worldwide; incidence of SS ~ 7/10^5/y; any type of vasculitis in 5–32% of SS [ | Questionable association: periaortitis, aortitis [ | +/- “PAN-like,” without aneurysms (skin, peripheral nerves, gastrointestinal, kidney, salivary glands, muscle); unclear if true vasculitis in CNS [ | General: dry eyes/mouth (dysphagia), fatigue, fever, arthralgia, myalgia. Vasculitis: purpura, urticaria-like lesions, skin ulcers; mononeuritis multiplex; mesenteritis, bowel infarction; hematuria. (for manifestations of CV, see above) [ | CRP →/ ↑, ESR ↑; anemia, thrombocytopenia, leukopenia all possible; immunofixation of serum (possible paraprotein); IgG →/ ↑; ANA →/ ↑; antibodies →/ ↑ (SSA/B, RF); cryoglobulins →/ ↑; C4 ↓ in CV [ | • In SS with vasculitis, cryoglobulins need to be screened for • Non-vasculitic manifestations in the peripheral nervous system (neuronopathy, demyelinating polyneuropathy, small fiber neuropathy) must be differentiated from vasculitic neuropathy • AAV can rarely co-exist with SS: ANCA-testing is advised • Visceral angiography is expected to be normal |
| Idiopathic inflammatory myopathies | Usually 40–60 Y/A (occurs from childhood to senescence); f > m (~ 2:1); worldwide; incidence any IM ~ 1–19/10^6/y; any type of vasculitis in ~ 9-30% of IM (DM > other IM) [ | (iv) | +/- Gastrointestinal (DM), cerebral (anti-synthetase syndrome, DM), pulmonary, skin [ | General: fatigue, weight-loss, myalgia, weakness, dysphagia, skin findings (Gottron’s sign and papules, heliotrope rash, and many others), arthralgia/arthritis, Raynaud’s, calcinosis, interstitial lung disease Vasculitis: skin purpura, livedo, ischemic/hemorrhagic stroke, intestinal ischemia/perforation. [ | CRP/ESR →/ ↑; CK (→)/↑-↑↑, troponin-T often ↑ (Troponin-I usually →); AST/ALT often ↑ (pseudo-hepatic); ANA →/ ↑ (nuclear/cytosolic); myositis antibodies ↑ ~ 60-80% (usually a panel is ordered) [ | • In suspected IM, capillaroscopy should be considered • A negative result of immunofluorescence (HEp-2 cells, nuclear or cytoplasmatic), does not rule out myositis antibodies • Vasculitis of muscle arteries can result in multifocal myositis and normal to elevated CK (esp. AAV, PAN) [ |
| Relapsing polychondritis | Usually 30–60 Y/A (occurs from childhood to senescence); m = f; worldwide; very rare, incidence ~ 0.7–3.5/10^6/y [ | ‡ Aorta (thoracic > abdominal) +/- Innominate, subclavian, CCA, ICA, vertebral, iliac, axillary, femoral [ | +/- Coronary (most frequently affected medium-sized artery), renal, celiac, mesenteric, hepatic, cerebral [ | Constitutional symptoms, chondritis (auricular ~ 80%, nasal ~ 40% (saddle nose), bronchial/larynx 50% (hoarseness, stridor, cough), joints ~ 40% (polyarthralgia/-itis), costal chondritis), ocular ~ 45% (episcleritis, scleritis, uveitis), ear ~ 27% (sensorineural hearing loss, vertigo), aortic insufficiency (dilatation of ascending aorta), skin (purpura, aphthous ulcers), aseptic meningitis, encephalitis, stroke [ | No specific laboratory findings; CRP ↑ ~ 90%; anemia and thrombocytosis frequent, leukocytosis and eosinophilia occasional; cytopenias possible (associated with myelodysplastic syndrome) [ | • In any patient presenting with RP, an extensive laboratory screening for secondary causes (esp. systemic vasculitides, RA, SLE, SS, or myelodysplasia) should be performed • Pulmonary function tests and eye examination should be performed to screen for possible bronchial or ocular disease • In males with RP: if MCV is > 100 fl and a platelet count of < 200×10^3/μl is found, it may be VEXAS-syndrome [ |
| Arthritides | ||||||
| Rheumatoid vasculitis | Usually onset > 60 Y/A, median 10–15y after RA diagnosis; m > f; incidence RV ~3.9/10^6/y; risk factors: smoking, severe RA (erosive, nodulosis, extraarticular manifestations), also in “burnt out” RA [ | +/- Aorta (esp. ascending); questionable association: “TAK-like” (rare cases) [ | ‡ “PAN-like” (usually without microaneurysm): skin, muscle kidneys, peripheral nerve, gastrointestinal (mesenteric, splenic, pancreatic, hepatic), +/- Testes, rarely coronary and cerebral [ | General: Constitutional symptoms, myalgia, arthritis, nodulosis. Vasculitis: skin ~ 90% (nail fold infarcts, livedo, scant palpable purpura, ulcers, and digital gangrene); mononeuritis multiplex 40%; eye (small vessels: scleritis, ulcerative keratitis, retinal vasculitis); other (alveolar hemorrhage, bowel ischemia, testicular or myocardial infarction, pancreatitis, stroke) [ | CRP/ESR ↑; anemia/thrombocytosis frequent; C3/4 →/ ↓; RF and/or anti- cyclic-citrullinated peptide typically ↑↑; p-ANCA without subspecificity and cryoglobulins are occasionally detected [ | • Inactive RA with extraarticular activity at RV onset common [ • Peripheral ulcerative keratitis points to imminent systemic RV • A combined skin and muscle biopsy increases diagnostic yield • Histology typically shows granulomatous inflammation in large- (sometimes rheumatoid nodules of aortic wall), pauciimmune fibrinoid necrosis in medium- and leucocytoclasia with immune complex deposition in small-vessel vasculitis [ |
| Spondyloarthritis | Usually adolescence to 40 Y/A (exceptionally > 60y); m > f (~ 2-3:1); worldwide (↑ with high HLA-B27 prevalence); prevalence of SPA ~ 0.2–1.6%; vasculitis rare, ↑ in longstanding disease and HLA-B27 positivity [ | ‡ aorta (root and ascending >> descending aorta); unclear association: periaortitis [ | (iv) | General: arthralgia/arthritis, inflammatory back pain, enthesitis, uveitis, symptoms of IBD Vasculitis: usually asymptomatic; dilatation of aortic root and/or ascending aorta can result in secondary aortic valve insufficiency, fibrosis can result in cardiac conduction disorders (atrioventricular block typical) [ | CRP/ESR often →, can be ↑; HLA-B27 positive in majority (negative result does not rule out SPA); mild anemia common | • If pure aortic regurgitation develops in SPA, consider screening for aortitis (FDG-PET/CT recommended) • If dilatation of the aortic root and/or ascending aorta is found in patients without other identifiable risk factors or family history, occult SPA may be present |
| Fibro-inflammatory diseases | ||||||
| IgG4-related disease | Mean age of onset ~ 57 Y/A (occurs from childhood to senescence); m > f (~ 3:2); worldwide; rare disease (incidence unknown) [ | ‡ Aorta (aortitis ~8%, thoracic aorta ↑; RPF or periaortitis ~17%, abdominal aorta ↑), iliac +/- CCA, vertebral, subclavian, pulmonary, vena cava [ | +/- Coronary, TA, mesenteric, splenic, celiac, renal, cerebral, skin (formation of aneurysms is common in medium sized arteries) [ | General: often mild symptoms, weight loss, fatigue, arthralgia, atopy. Any organ can be affected by infiltration/mass lesions: single organ ~25%, ⩾ 2 organs ~75%, on average 3 organs. Frequently affected: pancreas/liver/bile ducts, salivary glands, orbit, dura mater, aorta, and retroperitoneum (abdominal pain, hydronephrosis, aneurysm and rupture) [ | CRP/ESR often →, can be ↑ (~ 30%); eosinophilia (~ 30%); IgE ↑ (~ 60%), IgG →/ ↑; IgG4 ↑ (~ 60–70%, in aortitis more common than periaortitis); C3/4 often ↓; ANA ↑ ~ 30%; plasmablasts ↑ in peripheral blood common [ | • IgG4 ↑ is not specific, consider: AAV, SLE, SS, RA, GCA, liver cirrhosis, Erdheim-Chester disease etc. [ • Ultrasound of the salivary glands should be performed; they can be biopsied easily and involvement is frequent • Lymph node biopsy is usually unspecific and not diagnostic |
| Chronic periaortitis | Usually 40– 70 Y/A (occurs from early adulthood to senescence); m > f (~ 2–3:1); idiopathic form incidence ~ 1-10/10^6/y; risk factors: smoking, asbestos exposure [ | ‡ Abdominal aorta (usually infrarenal), iliac +/- Thoracic aorta, subclavian, innominate, proximal CCA [ | +/- renal, celiac, mesenteric [ | General: insidious onset of low-grade fever, fatigue, and weight loss; pain ~ 90% (abdomen, lumbar or inguinal regions, flanks). Ureteral obstruction with hydronephrosis (~ 60–70%), renal atrophy/failure. Scrotal or inguinal pain, hydrocele, varicocele. Venous encasement: leg edema/thrombosis. Rare: renal hypertension, laryngeal nerve palsy/cough, limb or abdominal claudication [ | No specific laboratory findings. CRP and/or ESR ↑ ~ 80%; anemia of chronic disease frequent; unspecific ANA ↑; IgG4 →/↑; creatinine ↑ (postrenal obstruction); anti-thyreoperoxidase ↑ (Hashimoto thyroiditis associated with CP) [ | • Serum IgG4 is often normal in biopsy-proven IgG4-RPF [ • Before diagnosing an idiopathic form of CP, it is advisable to consider and screen for the many secondary forms • GCA and other types of aortitis may cause some periarterial fat-stranding on CT, but not actual RPF; luminal narrowing does not usually occur in CP (but it can in TAK > GCA) |
| Miscellaneous | ||||||
| Sarcoidosis | Usually 30– 60 Y/A (occurs from childhood to senescence); f ≈ m; African American > Caucasian; incidence of vasculitis unknown, but rare; vasculitis can occur any time during disease course [ | +/- Aorta and direct large branches (“TAK-like”), main pulmonary artery and veins [ | +/- Mesenteric, hepatic, celiac, splenic, renal, coronary, TA, medium sized pulmonary arteries and veins, cerebral arteries/veins [ | General: fever, sarcoid manifestations in other organs (most common: pulmonary, skin, eyes, and liver) Vasculitis: small vessels: skin, peripheral nerves, lung; “PAN-like”: abdominal pain; large vessels: pulse differences/claudication, carotidodynia, pulmonary hypertension; CNS: lacunar/hemorrhagic strokes, rarely territorial infarction or CSVT [ | CRP ↑ ~ 50%; serum/urinary calcium often ↑; 1,25-Vitamin-D3 →/ ↑; angiotensin converting enzyme and soluble IL2-Receptor ↑ ~ 50%; IgG ↑ common (polyclonal); liver enzymes, troponin or creatinine ↑ in respective organ manifestations [ | • To identify sarcoidosis, examination of eyes, scars and tattoos and screening for hypercalcemia/hypercalciuria are helpful • An extracerebral biopsy target and large vessel vasculitis can most efficiently be identified with FDG-PET-CT • Serum Ig levels should be ordered (common variable immunodeficiency disorders can result in granulomatous disease with “TAK-like” presentation) [ |
| Thrombangiitis obliterans | Usually onset ~ 30–35 Y/A (range 20 - 50 Y/A); m > f (~ 5:1); Asia ↑ (especially West and East Asia); prevalence is declining; > 95 % are smokers [ | (iv) | ‡ Infrabrachial and infrapopliteal arteries, superficial veins +/- Splanchnic, coronary, (rarely described TA, cerebral, kidneys, testes) [ | Claudication of limbs, ischemic ulcers and gangrene, migratory thrombophlebitis (~ 60%), Raynaud’s (not symmetrical), mild sensory abnormalities, migratory arthralgia or mild arthritis (~ 10%, wrist and knees most common, usually in pre-occlusive phase) [ | No specific laboratory findings. CRP is almost always → (rarely mildly ↑); autoantibodies and cryoglobulins are not detectable. [ | • Non-vasculitic occlusive vasculopathy should be excluded (i.e., cryofibrinogenemia, APS, thrombophilia, embolic states etc.) • Thrombangiitis obliterans should be diagnosed cautiously in non-classical locations lacking histological confirmation, since other vasculitides and mimics can look very similar on imaging. |
(i) Main vessels or vessel beds affected as described in the literature (i.e., arteries or vessel beds not listed, may still be affected); if not specified otherwise, the vessel names indicate arteries. (ii) A selection of important and pertinent clinical manifestations is provided; the list is not exhaustive; the order is not according to frequency. (iii) Pearls mostly reflect the personal experience of the authors and are therefore only partially referenced. (iv) Not identified by our literature search. AAV, ANCA-associated vasculitis; ADA2, adenosine deaminase 2; ANA, anti-nuclear antibody; ANCA, anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies; ALT, alanine aminotransferase; AP, alkaline phosphatase; APS, antiphospholipid syndrome; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; BS, Behçet syndrome; CCA, common carotid artery; CK, creatine kinase; CNS, central nervous system; CRP, c-reactive protein; CV, cryoglobulinemic vasculitis; CVST, cerebral venous sinus thrombosis; DM, dermatomyositis; ECP, eosinophil cationic protein; ESR, erythrocyte sedimentation rate; EGPA, eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis; FDG-PET/CT, fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography/computed tomography; GCA; giant cell arteritis; GGT, gamma-glutamyltransferase; GN, glomerulonephritis; GPA, granulomatosis with polyangiitis; HLA, human leukocyte antigen; ICA, internal carotid artery; IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; Ig, immunoglobulin; IM, idiopathic inflammatory myopathies; MPA, microscopic polyangiitis; PAN, polyarteritis nodosa; RA, rheumatoid arthritis; RF, rheumatoid factor; RP, relapsing polychondritis; RPF, retroperitoneal fibrosis; RV, rheumatoid vasculitis; SLE, systemic lupus erythematosus; SPA, spondyloarthritis; SS, Sjogren’s syndrome; TA, temporal artery; TAK, Takayasu arteritis; VEXAS, (vacuoles, E1 enzyme, X-linked, autoinflammatory, somatic); Y/A, years of age
‡Typically affected vessels or vessel beds
+/-Occasionally to rarely affected vessels or vessel beds
↑Elevated/more frequent
↑↑Markedly elevated
→No change/normal/negative
↓Depressed/below normal
~Approximately