AI Article Synopsis

  • An interferon gene signature (IGS) is found in about 50% of early rheumatoid arthritis patients and negatively impacts their initial treatment response.
  • A multicenter study with 191 patients confirmed that a higher baseline IGS correlates with increased levels of circulating IFN-α and worse clinical outcomes after six months.
  • The findings suggest that IFN-α triggers harmful immune responses in patients, highlighting the IGS as a potential biomarker for predicting disease severity and the need for targeted therapies.

Article Abstract

Objectives: An interferon (IFN) gene signature (IGS) is present in approximately 50% of early, treatment naive rheumatoid arthritis (eRA) patients where it has been shown to negatively impact initial response to treatment. We wished to validate this effect and explore potential mechanisms of action.

Methods: In a multicentre inception cohort of eRA patients (n=191), we examined the whole blood IGS () with reference to circulating IFN proteins, clinical outcomes and epigenetic influences on circulating CD19+ B and CD4+ T lymphocytes.

Results: We reproduced our previous findings demonstrating a raised baseline IGS. We additionally showed, for the first time, that the IGS in eRA reflects circulating IFN-α protein. Paired longitudinal analysis demonstrated a significant reduction between baseline and 6-month IGS and IFN-α levels (p<0.0001 for both). Despite this fall, a raised baseline IGS predicted worse 6-month clinical outcomes such as increased disease activity score (DAS-28, p=0.025) and lower likelihood of a good EULAR clinical response (p=0.034), which was independent of other conventional predictors of disease activity and clinical response. Molecular analysis of CD4+ T cells and CD19+ B cells demonstrated differentially methylated CPG sites and dysregulated expression of disease relevant genes, including and , associated with baseline IGS/IFNα levels. Differentially methylated CPG sites implicated altered transcription factor binding in B cells (GATA3, ETSI, NFATC2, EZH2) and T cells (p300, HIF1α).

Conclusions: Our data suggest that, in eRA, IFN-α can cause a sustained, epigenetically mediated, pathogenic increase in lymphocyte activation and proliferation, and that the IGS is, therefore, a robust prognostic biomarker. Its persistent harmful effects provide a rationale for the initial therapeutic targeting of IFN-α in selected patients with eRA.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9380486PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/annrheumdis-2022-222370DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

rheumatoid arthritis
8
era patients
8
igs
5
interferon-α-mediated therapeutic
4
therapeutic resistance
4
resistance early
4
early rheumatoid
4
arthritis implicates
4
implicates epigenetic
4
epigenetic reprogramming
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!