Objective: Patients with spondyloarthritis (SpA) often present with microscopic signs of gut inflammation, a risk factor for progressive disease. We investigated whether mucosal innate-like T cells are involved in dysregulated interleukin-23 (IL-23)/IL-17 responses in the gut-joint axis in SpA.
Methods: Ileal and colonic intraepithelial lymphocytes (IELs), lamina propria lymphocytes (LPLs), and paired peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) were isolated from treatment-naive patients with nonradiographic axial SpA with (n = 11) and without (n = 14) microscopic gut inflammation and healthy controls (n = 15) undergoing ileocolonoscopy.
Objectives: Salivary gland lymphocytic infiltrates are a hallmark of primary SS (pSS), but traditional biopsy techniques hold several disadvantages. Ultrasound-guided core needle (US-guided CN) parotid gland biopsy is minimally invasive and reliable for diagnosis of lymphoma in pSS. This proof-of-concept study aimed to explore this technique in the diagnostic work-up of pSS and is the first to address its value in a consecutive cohort independently of the presence of salivary gland swelling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the last decade, many randomised controlled trials (RCTs) with biological DMARDs (bDMARDs) have been performed in patients with primary Sjögren's syndrome (pSS). Unfortunately, no bDMARD has yet been approved for systemic treatment of pSS. The heterogeneity of disease manifestations raises two essential questions: 1) which outcome measure is valid, reliable and responsive to demonstrate treatment efficacy and should be used as primary study endpoint? and 2) which pSS patients should be included in clinical trials? Both the selection of the primary study endpoint and the selection of patients are crucial and evolving issues in clinical trial design in pSS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF