Objectives: As a rare and heterogeneous disease, mixed connective tissue disease (MCTD) represents a challenge. Herein, we aimed to unravel potential pitfalls including correct referral diagnosis, distinction from other connective tissue diseases (CTD) and treatment modalities. Methods: We characterised the MCTD cohort at our tertiary referral centre. All patients were evaluated for fulfilment of classification criteria of various CTDs. SLEDAI-2 K and EUSTAR-AI were used in accordance with previous research to evaluate disease activity and treatment response. Results: Out of 85 patients initially referred as MCTD, only one-third (33/85, 39%) fulfilled the diagnostic MCTD criteria and the other patients had undifferentiated CTD (16/85, 19%), non-MCTD overlap syndromes (11/85, 13%) and other rheumatic diseases. In our final cohort of 33 MCTD patients, 16 (48%) also met the diagnostic criteria of systemic sclerosis, 13 (39%) these of systemic lupus erythematosus, 6 (18%) these of rheumatoid arthritis and 3 (9%) these of primary myositis. Management of MCTD required immunomodulating combination therapy in most cases (15/28, 54%), whereas monotherapy was less frequent (10/28, 36%), and only a few (3/28, 11%) remained without immune modulators until the end of the follow-up period. Treatment led to a significant decline in disease activity. Conclusions: Our study showed a high risk for misdiagnosis for patients with MCTD. As a multi-organ disease, MCTD required prolonged immunomodulating therapy to achieve remission. The establishment of an international registry with longitudinal data from observational multi-centre cohorts might represent a first step to address the many unmet needs of MCTD.
CITATION STYLE
Wanzenried, A., Garaiman, A., Jordan, S., Distler, O., & Maurer, B. (2022). The enigma of mixed connective tissue disease—challenges in routine care. Clinical Rheumatology, 41(11), 3503–3511. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10067-022-06286-w
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.