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Review Thyroid disease in Sjögren's syndrome. 2007
Jara LJ, Navarro C, Brito-Zerón Mdel P, García-Carrasco M, Escárcega RO, Ramos-Casals M. · Direction of Education and Research, Hospital de Especialidades, Centro Médico La Raza, IMSS, Seris y Zaachila s/n C.P., 02990, Mexico City, México. · Clin Rheumatol. · Pubmed #17558463 No free full text.
Abstract: From 1960 to 2007, an important number of patients with primary Sjögren's syndrome (pSS) along with thyroid disease diagnosed by laboratory data and clinical presentation were reported. The most common thyroid disorder found was autoimmune thyroiditis and the most common hormonal pattern was subclinical hypothyroidism. The coexistence of SS and thyroiditis is frequent and suggests a common genetic or environmental factor predisposition with similar pathogenic mechanisms. pSS was ten times more frequent in patients with autoimmune thyroid disease and autoimmune thyroiditis was nine times more frequent in pSS. Therefore, SS should be studied in patients with thyroid disease and vice versa. Antigens are shared by both thyroid and salivary glands, which could be responsible for the association between both diseases. Immunogenetic studies had suggested that both diseases have a common genetic predisposition. pSS and thyroid disease patients were mostly women with positive antithyroglobulin, antiparietal cell and antithyroid peroxidase antibodies. Thyroid dysfunction is frequent in pSS patients and those prone to develop thyroid disorders are identified by thyroid-related autoantibodies or by rheumatoid factor and anti-Ro/SSA activity. Patients with pSS have an increased tendency to develop other autoimmune diseases. Hypothyroidism was the most common autoimmune disease developed in pSS patients during follow-up of 10.5 years. Lymphomas are also associated with SS and thyroiditis and a 67-fold increased risk for thyroid mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma and a 44-fold increased risk for parotid lymphoma is being attributed to autoimmune thyroiditis and pSS. It is suggested that immune mechanism deficiency is a causal factor for B cell lymphoma in pSS and autoimmune thyroid disease. Other studies are necessary to clarify the shared pathogenesis mechanism in SS and autoimmune thyroid disease and to understand this fascinating autoimmune association.
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Review Antimitochondrial antibodies in patients with chronic hepatitis C virus infection: description of 18 cases and review of the literature. 2005
Ramos-Casals M, Pares A, Jara LJ, Solans R, Viñas O, Vázquez P, Sánchez-Tapias JM, Rodés J, Font J, Anonymous00017. · Department of Autoimmune Diseases, Institut d'Investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i Sunyer (IDIBAPS), Hospital Clínic, School of Medicine, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain. · J Viral Hepat. · Pubmed #16255767 No free full text.
Abstract: To describe the clinical and immunologic patterns of disease expression of patients with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection and positive antimitochondrial antibodies (AMA). We investigated the presence of AMA in 237 consecutive HCV patients with extrahepatic manifestations from an International Registry. AMA were detected by indirect immunofluorescence in triple rat tissue (liver, stomach and kidney), aceton-fixed criosections and FITC-conjugated rabbit anti-human immunoglobulins. We found positive AMA in 18 (8%) out of 237 HCV patients. All patients were female with a mean age at protocol inclusion of 65.8 years (ranging from 37 to 87 years). Twelve (67%) patients fulfilled classification criteria for systemic autoimmune diseases (SAD), including Sjögren's syndrome (n = 7), systemic sclerosis (n = 3) and systemic lupus erythematosus (n = 2). Fourteen (78%) of the HCV-AMA patients presented at least one of the highly suggestive characteristics of primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC): 9 (50%) had a specific M2 pattern, 6 (33%) had more than twice normal levels of alkaline phosphatase, 5 (28%) had raised IgM levels and 4 (22%) a histological pattern compatible with PBC. Five (28%) patients developed neoplasia after detection of AMA. Seven (39%) patients died, due to neoplasia (n = 4), cirrhotic complications (n = 2) and hepatopulmonary syndrome (n = 1). We describe a subset of HCV patients with positive AMA who presented a broad spectrum of clinical features, including liver, autoimmune and neoplasic manifestations. Two-thirds of these patients presented an associated SAD, mainly Sjögren's syndrome or systemic sclerosis, together with a high frequency of multiple autoantibodies and an increased prevalence of cirrhosis and neoplasia.
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Clinical Conference A randomized, double-blind, multicenter, controlled clinical trial of cyclosporine plus chloroquine vs. cyclosporine plus placebo in early-onset rheumatoid arthritis. 2004
Miranda JM, Alvarez-Nemegyei J, Saavedra MA, Terán L, Galván-Villegas F, García-Figueroa J, Jara LJ, Barile L, Anonymous00012. · Departamento de Reumatología, Hospital de Especialidades, Centro Médico Nacional La Raza, Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social (IMSS), Mexico City, Mexico. · Arch Med Res. · Pubmed #15036798 No free full text.
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Our objective was to assess the efficacy and safety of cyclosporine-A (CsA) plus chloroquine (Clq) in early-onset rheumatoid arthritis (RA) compared to CsA plus placebo. METHODS: We conducted a prospective, 12-month follow-up, multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of CsA (2.5-5 mg/kg/day[d]) plus Clq (150 mg/d) vs. CsA plus placebo in active RA of <2 years of evolution. RESULTS: A total of 149 patients were included; 111 patients (74.4%) completed the 12-month follow-up period. Evaluation at 6 and 12 months showed improvement for all clinical disease parameters. In both groups there was a decrease in tender joint count, swollen joint count, pain, assessment of efficacy by both investigator and patient, functional assessment, and morning stiffness, all differences statistically significant. With an intention-to-treat analysis, there was 64% in the CsA plus Clq group (CsA/Clq) and 63% in the CsA plus placebo group (CsA/Plac) at 12 months in the American College of Rheumatology (ACR)-20 criteria of improvement. Response rate for ACR-50 was 48 and 47%, and for ACR-70 it was 29% in both groups; the difference was not statistically significant between study groups. Gastrointestinal complaints were common in both groups. Four patients in CsA/Clq group and five patients in CsA/placebo group increased creatinine levels; two patients in each group discontinued treatment due to this reason. CONCLUSIONS: There was no advantage to adding chloroquine to cyclosporine in patients with RA.
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Article Systemic autoimmune diseases in patients with hepatitis C virus infection: characterization of 1020 cases (The HISPAMEC Registry). 2009
Ramos-Casals M, Muñoz S, Medina F, Jara LJ, Rosas J, Calvo-Alen J, Brito-Zerón P, Forns X, Sánchez-Tapias JM, Anonymous00071. · Laboratory of Autoimmune Diseases Josep Font, Department of Autoimmune Diseases, Institut d'Investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i Sunyer (IDIBAPS), Hospital Clínic, 08036-Barcelona, Spain. · J Rheumatol. · Pubmed #19369460 No free full text.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To describe the clinical and immunologic characteristics of a large series of patients with systemic autoimmune diseases (SAD) associated with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. METHODS: The HISPAMEC Registry is a multicenter international study group dedicated to collecting data on patients diagnosed with SAD with serological evidence of chronic HCV infection. The information sources are cases reported by physicians of the HISPAMEC Study Group and periodic surveillance of reported cases by a Medline search updated up to December 31, 2007. RESULTS: One thousand twenty HCV patients with SAD were included in the registry. Patients were reported from Southern Europe (60%), North America (15%), Asia (14%), Northern Europe (9%), South America (1%), and Australia (1%). Countries reporting the most cases were Spain (236 cases), France (222 cases), Italy (144 cases), USA (120 cases), and Japan (95 cases). The most frequently reported SAD were Sjögren's syndrome (SS; 483 cases), rheumatoid arthritis (RA; 150 cases), systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE; 129 cases), polyarteritis nodosa (78 cases), antiphospholipid syndrome (59 cases), inflammatory myopathies (39 cases), and sarcoidosis (28 cases). Twenty patients had 2 or more SAD. Epidemiological data were available in 677 cases. Four hundred eighty-seven (72%) patients were female and 186 (28%) male, with a mean age of 49.5 +/- 1.0 years at SAD diagnosis and 50.5 +/- 1.1 years at diagnosis of HCV infection. The main immunologic features were antinuclear antibody (ANA) in 61% of patients, rheumatoid factor (RF) in 57%, hypocomplementemia in 52%, and cryoglobulins in 52%. The main differential aspect between primary and HCV-related SAD was the predominance of cryoglobulinemic-related markers (cryoglobulins, RF, hypocomplementemia) over specific SAD-related markers (anti-ENA antibodies, anti-dsDNA, anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide) in patients with HCV. CONCLUSION: In the selected cohort, the SAD most commonly reported in association with chronic HCV infection were SS (nearly half the cases), RA and SLE. Nearly two thirds of SAD-HCV cases were reported from the Mediterranean area. In these patients, ANA, RF and cryoglobulins are the predominant immunological features.
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Article Systemic autoimmune diseases co-existing with chronic hepatitis C virus infection (the HISPAMEC Registry): patterns of clinical and immunological expression in 180 cases. 2005
Ramos-Casals M, Jara LJ, Medina F, Rosas J, Calvo-Alen J, Mañá J, Anaya JM, Font J, Anonymous00031. · Department of Autoimmune Diseases, Institut d'Investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i Sunyer, School of Medicine, University of Barcelona, Hospital Clínic, Barcelona, Spain. · J Intern Med. · Pubmed #15910559 No free full text.
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: To describe the clinical and immunologic characteristics of a large series of patients with systemic autoimmune diseases (SAD) associated with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. METHODS: We analysed 180 patients diagnosed with SAD and chronic HCV infection seen consecutively at our centres during the last 10 years. The clinical and immunological patterns of disease expression were compared with 180 SAD-matched patients without chronic HCV infection. RESULTS: A total of 180 HCV patients fulfilled the classification criteria for the following SAD: Sjogren's syndrome (n = 77), systemic lupus erythematosus (n = 43), rheumatoid arthritis (n = 14), antiphospholipid syndrome (n = 14), polyarteritis nodosa (n = 8) and other SAD (n = 24). One hundred and thirty (72%) patients were female and 50 (28%) male, with a mean age at SAD diagnosis of 50 years. The main immunologic features were antinuclear antibodies in 69% of patients, cryoglobulinaemia in 62%, hypocomplementaemia in 56% and rheumatoid factor (RF) in 56%. Compared with the SAD-matched HCV-negative group, SAD-HCV patients presented a lower prevalence of females (P = 0.016), an older age at SAD diagnosis (P = 0.039) and a higher prevalence of vasculitis (P < 0.001) and neoplasia (P < 0.001). Immunologically, SAD-HCV patients presented a lower prevalence of antinuclear (P = 0.036), anti-extractable nuclear antigen (P = 0.038) and anti-DNA (P = 0.005) antibodies, and a higher frequency of RF (P = 0.003), hypocomplementaemia (P < 0.001) and cryoglobulins (P < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: In comparison with an SAD-matched HCV-negative population, SAD-HCV patients were older and more likely to be male, with a higher frequency of vasculitis, cryoglobulinaemia and neoplasia. This complex pattern of disease expression is generated by a chronic viral infection that induces both liver and autoimmune disease.
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