AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study aimed to identify blood markers for assessing disease activity in juvenile dermatomyositis (DM) to enhance disease management and involved 123 patients and 53 healthy controls.
  • - Key findings included an increase in specific B cell and Th2 cell populations in juvenile DM patients, particularly in those diagnosed within the last year, correlating with various clinical and laboratory measures of disease activity.
  • - The results suggest that these B cells and Th2 cells could serve as potential biomarkers for monitoring disease activity in juvenile DM and may play a role in the disease's development.

Article Abstract

Objective: This study was undertaken to identify blood markers of juvenile dermatomyositis (DM) disease activity (DA), which are needed to improve disease management.

Methods: The study comprised a total of 123 juvenile DM patients and 53 healthy controls. Results of laboratory tests (aldolase, creatinine kinase, lactate dehydrogenase [LDH], aspartate aminotransferase) and clinical measures of DA in patients with juvenile DM, including the Manual Muscle Testing in 8 muscles (MMT-8), Childhood Myositis Assessment Scale (CMAS), and disease activity scores (DAS) (total DAS for juvenile DM, the muscle DAS, and the skin DAS), were recorded when available. Surface phenotype of peripheral blood mononuclear cells was assessed using flow cytometry. Whole blood transcriptional profiles were studied using either RNA-sequencing or microarrays. Differential gene expression was determined using DESeq and compared by pathway and gene ontology analyses.

Results: Conventional memory (CD27+IgD-) B cells expressing low CXCR5 levels (CXCR5 CM B cells) were significantly increased in frequency and absolute numbers in 2 independent cohorts of juvenile DM patients compared with healthy controls. The frequency of CD4+ Th2 memory cells (CD45RA-CXCR5-CCR6-CXCR3-) was also increased in juvenile DM, especially in patients who were within <1 year from diagnosis. The frequency of CXCR5 CM B cells correlated with serum aldolase levels and with a blood interferon-stimulated gene transcriptional signature. Furthermore, both the frequency and absolute numbers of CXCR5 CM B cells correlated with clinical and laboratory measures of muscle DA (MMT-8, CMAS, aldolase, and LDH).

Conclusion: These findings suggest that both CM B cells lacking the CXCR5 follicular marker and CXCR5- Th2 cells represent potential biomarkers of DA in juvenile DM and may contribute to its pathogenesis.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/art.42446DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

disease activity
12
juvenile patients
12
juvenile dermatomyositis
8
dermatomyositis disease
8
healthy controls
8
juvenile
6
association juvenile
4
disease
4
activity expansion
4
blood
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!