Autoimmun Rev
September 2024
Inflammatory rheumatic diseases are different pathologic conditions associated with a deregulated immune response, codified along a spectrum of disorders, with autoinflammatory and autoimmune diseases as two-end phenotypes of this continuum. Despite pathogenic differences, inflammatory rheumatic diseases are commonly managed with a limited number of immunosuppressive drugs, sometimes with partial evidence or transferring physicians' knowledge in different patients. In addition, several randomized clinical trials, enrolling these patients, did not meet the primary pre-established outcomes and these findings could be linked to the underlying molecular diversities along the spectrum of inflammatory rheumatic disorders.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeveral previous studies from our laboratory have indicated that the salivary gland epithelia of primary Sjögren's syndrome (SS) patients are not only the target of autoimmune immune responses, but also key instigators of the chronic salivary gland inflammatory infiltrates of patients. In particular, the comparative analysis of salivary gland tissue specimens and of in-vitro cultured non-neoplastic salivary gland epithelial cell lines (SGEC, of ductal type) from SS-patients and non-SS disease-controls, have unequivocally highlighted the presence of intrinsic activation in the ductal epithelia of SS-patients and of aberrant expression of inflammagenic molecules thereof, that correlate with the severity of local histopathologic changes, as well as of systemic manifestations of the disease. In the same context, we have recently shown that the ductal epithelia of SS-patients manifest cell-autonomous activation of the AIM2 inflammasome owing to the presence of aberrant cytoplasmic accumulations of damaged DNA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Retroperitoneal fibrosis (RPF) is mostly idiopathic (iRPF); however, it can be secondary to drugs, malignancies, infections, or, as recently recognised, can be part of the IgG4-related diseases. The aim of our study was i) to describe the presenting clinical/laboratory/imaging features and treatment modalities used in patients with iRPF and ii) to evaluate factors potentially associated with disease relapse.
Methods: The medical records of patients diagnosed with iRPF and followed in four tertiary medical units in Athens, Greece from 2000 to 2018 were retrospectively evaluated.
Perinuclear anti-neutrophilic cytoplasmic antibodies (P-ANCA) recognize heterogeneous antigens, including myeloperoxidase (MPO), lactoferrin, elastase, cathepsin-G and bactericidal/permeability-increasing protein. Although P-ANCA have diagnostic utility in vasculitides, they may also be found in patients with various other systemic autoimmune rheumatic diseases (SARDs). Nevertheless, the clinical significance and the targets recognized by P-ANCA in such patients remain unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrimary Sjögren's syndrome (SS) is characterized by chronic periductal inflammatory infiltrates in the salivary glands. Several previous studies have indicated that the ductal epithelia of SS patients play a pro-inflammatory role and manifest an intrinsically activated status, as demonstrated in cultured non-neoplastic ductal salivary gland epithelial cell (SGEC) lines. Herein, we investigated the activation of inflammasomes in the salivary epithelia of SS patients and non-SS controls, using salivary biopsy tissues and SGEC lines.
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