AI Article Synopsis

  • VEXAS syndrome is an autoinflammatory disorder linked to mutations in the UBA1 gene, with thrombosis being a significant clinical feature affecting 49% of patients.
  • The majority of thrombosis cases were venous thromboembolism (VTE), often occurring unprovoked, recurrent, and sometimes even in patients on anticoagulants.
  • Despite the high incidence of VTE, overall patient survival was good, with an 88% survival rate over nearly 5 years, indicating that thrombosis does not significantly impact long-term survival in these patients.

Article Abstract

VEXAS (vacuoles, E1 enzyme, X-linked, autoinflammatory, somatic) syndrome, caused by somatic mutations in UBA1, is an autoinflammatory disorder with diverse systemic manifestations. Thrombosis is a prominent clinical feature of VEXAS syndrome. The risk factors and frequency of thrombosis in VEXAS syndrome are not well described, due to the disease's recent discovery and the paucity of large databases. We evaluated 119 patients with VEXAS syndrome for venous and arterial thrombosis and correlated their presence with clinical outcomes and survival. Thrombosis occurred in 49% of patients, mostly venous thromboembolism (VTE; 41%). Almost two-thirds of VTEs were unprovoked, 41% were recurrent, and 20% occurred despite anticoagulation. The cumulative incidence of VTE was 17% at 1 year from symptom onset and 40% by 5 years. Cardiac and pulmonary inflammatory manifestations were associated with time to VTE. M41L was positively associated specifically with pulmonary embolism by univariate (odds ratio [OR]: 4.58, confidence interval [CI] 1.28-16.21, P = .02) and multivariate (OR: 16.94, CI 1.99-144.3, P = .01) logistic regression. The cumulative incidence of arterial thrombosis was 6% at 1 year and 11% at 5 years. The overall survival of the entire patient cohort at median follow-up time of 4.8 years was 88%, and there was no difference in survival between patients with or without thrombosis (P = .8). Patients with VEXAS syndrome are at high risk of VTE; thromboprophylaxis should administered be in high-risk settings unless strongly contraindicated.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11143532PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood.2023022329DOI Listing

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