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Autoantibodies and neuropsychiatric events at the time of systemic lupus erythematosus diagnosis: Results from an international inception cohort studyopen access

Authors
Hanly, J.G.Urowitz, M.B.Siannis, F.Farewell, V.Gordon, C.Bae, S.C.Isenberg, D.Dooley, M.A.Clarke, A.Bernatsky, S.Gladman, D.Fortin, P.R.Manzi, S.Steinsson, K.Bruce, I.N.Ginzler, E.Aranow, C.Wallace, D.J.Ramsey-Goldman, R.Van, Vollenhoven R.Sturfelt, G.Nived, O.Sanchez-Guerrero, J.Alarc?n, G.S.Petri, M.Khamashta, M.Zoma, A.Font, J.Kalunian, K.Douglas, J.Qi, Q.Thompson, K.Merrill, J.T.
Issue Date
Mar-2008
Publisher
merican College of Rheumatology
Citation
Arthritis and Rheumatism, v.58, no.3, pp.843 - 853
Indexed
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Arthritis and Rheumatism
Volume
58
Number
3
Start Page
843
End Page
853
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/172111
DOI
10.1002/art.23218
ISSN
0004-3591
Abstract
Objective. To examine, in an inception cohort of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) patients, the association between neuropsychiatric (NP) events and antiribosomal P (anti-P), antiphospholipid (lupus anticoagulant [LAC], anticardiolipin), anti-β2-glycoprotein I, and anti-NR2 glutamate receptor antibodies. Methods. NP events were identified using the American College of Rheumatology case definitions and clustered into central/peripheral and diffuse/focal events. Attribution of NP events to SLE was determined using decision rules of differing stringency. Autoantibodies were measured without knowledge of NP events or their attribution. Results. Four hundred twelve patients were studied (87.4% female; mean ± SD age 34.9 ± 13.5 years, mean ± SD disease duration 5.0 ± 4.2 months). There were 214 NP events in 133 patients (32.3%). The proportion of NP events attributed to SLE varied from 15% to 36%. There was no association between autoantibodies and NP events overall. However, the frequency of anti-P antibodies in patients with central NP events attributed to SLE was 4 of 20 (20%), versus 3 of 107 (2.8%) in patients with other NP events and 24 of 279 (8.6%) in those with no NP events (P = 0.04). Among patients with diffuse NP events, 3 of 11 had anti-P antibodies (27%), compared with 4 of 111 patients with other NP events (3.6%) and 24 of 279 of those with no NP events (8.6%) (P = 0.02). Specific clinical-serologic associations were found between anti-P and psychosis attributed to SLE (P = 0.02) and between LAC and cerebrovascular disease attributed to SLE (P = 0.038). There was no significant association between other autoantibodies and NP events. Conclusion. Clinically distinct NP events attributed to SLE and occurring around the time of diagnosis were found to be associated with anti-P antibodies and LAC. This suggests that there are different autoimmune pathogenetic mechanisms, although low sensitivity limits the clinical application of testing for these antibodies.
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