Clinical heterogeneity and prognostic features of South Australian patients with anti-synthetase autoantibodies

79Citations
Citations of this article
67Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Aim: To determine the clinical, serological and prognostic features of patients with autoantibodies against three aminoacyl-transfer RNA synthetases (ARS), namely Jo-1 (histidyl-tRNA synthetase), PL-7 (threonyl-tRNA synthetase) and PL-12 (alanyl-tRNA synthetase) in South Australia. Methods: Patients with autoantibodies against ARS detected by line immunoassay (anti-Jo1, anti-PL7, anti-PL12) or enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (anti-Jo1) were identified from existing laboratory databases for the period 1994-2009. Demographic, clinical and serological data were obtained by retrospective review of patients' medical records and laboratory databases. Results: Forty-two patients with autoantibodies were identified (anti-Jo1 = 37, anti-PL7 = 4, anti-PL12 = 1). Females were more commonly affected than males (M:F = 12:30). Twenty-one patients had polymyositis (anti-Jo1 = 17, anti-PL7 = 4), seven dermatomyositis (anti-Jo1 = 6, anti-PL12 = 1), 10 overlap syndrome (anti-Jo1 = 10; lupus = 4, scleroderma = 3, Sjögren's syndrome = 2 and rheumatoid arthritis = 2) and four had interstitial lung disease (ILD) only (anti-Jo1 = 4). ILD was present in 69%, polyarthritis in 59% and positive anti-nuclear antibody (ANA) in 43% of patients. Concurrence of autoantibodies against Ro-52 with Jo-1 was seen in 12 patients. The mean follow-up period was 8.3years (95% CI 5.8-10.8) with 12 deaths. Poor prognostic indicators were age of onset >60years (P= 0.001), cancer (P= 0.002), negative ANA (P= 0.006) and negative autoantibodies to extractable nuclear antigens (P= 0.02). Conclusion: Patients with autoantibodies against ARS present with varied clinical features and occasionally with isolated lung involvement (amyopathic ILD). Older age of onset, malignancy and negative immunologic tests are predictors of poor prognosis. Concurrence of autoantibodies against Jo-1 and Ro-52 may reflect a coupling effect during generation of autoimmunity. © 2011 The Authors. Internal Medicine Journal © 2011 Royal Australasian College of Physicians.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Dugar, M., Cox, S., Limaye, V., Blumbergs, P., & Roberts-Thomson, P. J. (2011). Clinical heterogeneity and prognostic features of South Australian patients with anti-synthetase autoantibodies. Internal Medicine Journal, 41(9), 674–679. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1445-5994.2010.02164.x

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free