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Clinical Immunology Conleth Feighery John Jackson
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Auto-antibodies Often very helpful in making diagnosis Rarely entirely specific – i.e. can occur in range of diseases ANA, rheumatoid factor examples of this
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Auto-antibodies ANA usually positive in connective tissue diseases - CTD Sub-categories of ANA may define the type of CTD Double stranded DNA – exclusive to SLE Antibodies to “extractable nuclear antigens” define other types of CTD
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Case 6 32 year old bank official Dry mouth +++ Water to bedside Customer interaction difficult Fatigue +
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Case 6 Examination - Reduced saliva Sub-mandibular gland swollen Dental damage
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Extractable nuclear antigens Antibodies to sub-fractions of nucleus Ro antibodies – found in a ‘common’ CTD called Sjogren’s syndrome – in ~ 75% of pts Also found in other CTDs including lupus – so not specific
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Sjogren’s syndrome Features Inflammation of glands - lacrimal, salivary Symptoms - dry eyes, dry mouth Joint, muscle symptoms - sometimes Associated CTD - RA, SLE …. Older females
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Case 6 - Sjogren’s syndrome Confirming the diagnosis - History Quantify tears, saliva production Biopsy ? Autoantibodies – ANA positive – Ro antibody positive
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Case 6 - Sjogren’s syndrome Cause - Lymphocytic infiltrate of exocrine glands Salivary, lacrimal, genital glands affected Monoclonal expansion of B cells can occur Lymphoma may develop
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Case 6 - Sjogren’s syndrome Associates with other diseases SLE Rheumatoid arthritis Thyroid disease Primary biliary cirrhosis HLA genes associated
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Ro antibodies Can cross placenta and rarely - Cause complete congenital heart block – Damage to heart conducting system Cause skin inflammation – ‘neonatal lupus’
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ENA antibodies - valuable Help define type of CTD - Sjogren’s syndrome - Ro, La antibodies SLE - Sm antibodies Scleroderma - Scl 70 antibodies Anti-RNP - mixed connective tissue disease
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Case 7 44 year old female Arthralgia, myalgia Raynaud’s phenomenon Fatigue
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Case 7 Examination - Mild sclerodactyly Telangiectasia, hands, face
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Sclerodactyly of fingers Sclero = hard Dactyly = digit
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Telangiectasia
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Case 7 diagnosis is CREST Clinical findings Centromere auto-antibody C = calcinosis R = Raynaud’s E = oesophagus S = sclerodactyly T= telangiectasia
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Anti-centromere antibody - ANA observed in dividing cells Positive in 70% of CREST patients
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Systemic sclerosis (scleroderma) More severe version of CREST Skin thickening – arms, thorax, face GIT structures affected – oesophagus – dysphagia - small intestine – dysmotility, malabsorption Lungs – fibrosis Caused by deposition of collagen - unexplained
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Systemic sclerosis (scleroderma) Auto-antibody – to a ENA Anti-Scl 70 - antigen is enzyme topoisomerase I
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Case 8 Female, 54 years Fatigue Skin itch x 2 years Mild icterus Examination Generally healthy Icterus confirmed Liver, spleen size normal
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Liver auto-immunity Primary biliary cirrhosis Females Middle-aged Inflammatory process focused on intra-hepatic biliary tree Liver failure – common reason for liver transplantion
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Case 8 auto-antibody tests 2 helpful auto-antibodies – Anti-mitochondrial antibody Confirmatory antibody to enzyme - Anti-pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH)
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Mitochrondrial antibody Kidney tubule tissue
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Primary biliary cirrhosis Liver granuloma – early disease Established cirrhosis
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Chronic active hepatitis Females Often in younger age group – 20s Less common form of liver disease Antibodies to “smooth muscle” BUT not specific for this disease
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Connective tissue disease Vasculitis
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Inflammation - focus on blood vessels Damage to blood vessel - – local thrombosis, – haemorrhage – damage to tissue it supplies
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Vasculitic lesions in vasculitis
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WG – case No other systemic symptoms Decision to treat with cyclophosphamide, steroids
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Blood vessel size in vasculitis
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Vasculitis Clinical presentation can be obscure Systemic inflammatory disease - ? cause Pyrexia of unknown origin Infection ?? Malignancy ??
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Wegener’s granulomatosis Small vessel vasculitis Classically affects - Upper respiratory tract – nose, ears, sinuses Lower respiratory tract - lungs Kidneys But can affect any organ, including skin GIT sometimes, but less common
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Wegener’s granulomatosis Bleeding is often the clue! Nasal – epistaxis Lungs – haemoptysis Kidney – haematuria PUO – pyrexia of unknown origin Systemic symptoms – joint, muscle pain
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Wegener’s - clinical features Episcleritis Saddle nose deformity
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Wegener’s granulomatosis Diagnosis often missed in past Not uncommon disorder – but many medics have not seen a case 100+ cases diagnosed in 15 years, SJH Clinical features can be atypical Auto-antibody – specific, sensitive – use leading to increased diagnosis
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WG – case, 1992 RE - 26 year old Australian, on world tour 3 week history of haemoptysis Possible weight loss of 6kg Arthralgia - large joints Rash - macular, erythematous
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WG – case Rapid deterioration - in 1 week Temp 38 Synovitis of small joints Episcleritis Blistering necrotic skin rash Haemoptysis +++
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WG - case 1 Differential diagnosis - Tuberculosis ? Carcinoma of lung ? Bacterial infection ? Auto-immune disease – vasculitis ?
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WG - case 1 WCC - 25 x 10 9/ L Urine - haematuria, proteinuria Lung biopsy - alveolitis (ICU) Auto-antibody screen + C-ANCA DIAGNOSIS - Wegener’s
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C-ANCA PR3+
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Wegener’s auto-antibodies First step - Anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody = ANCA Immunofluorescence test Second step - Anti-PR3 ELISA
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Wegener’s granulomatosis Why is the diagnosis missed ? Limited Wegener’s – upper airways alone – Sinusitis – Rhinitis – Deafness Skin or other organ alone Diagnosis not considered
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Wegener’s granulomatosis Treatment Immunosuppressive drugs – cyclophosphamide Steroids Good response usually – mortality of disease reduced +++
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Wegener’s granulomatosis However - Relapse is very common ~ 50% Further organs may become involved Chronic renal damage may develop – dialysis, transplant
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Another case …… Another example of connective tissue disease Auto-antibodies help “dissect” the condition
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Case 8. 24 year old female parachutist Presented with marked ecchymosis - sites of parachute strap marks Mild arthralgia, fatigue DVT in calf 1 year previously
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Case 8. Tests - v.low platelet count 7 x 10 9 WCC count 3 x 10 9 Haemoglobin 10g ANA positive, titre 640 Diagnosis ??
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Case 8. Further auto-antibody tests – Anti-cardiolipin antibody ++ – Anti-beta2-glycoprotein antibody ++ Diagnosis ?? Anti-phospholipid syndrome
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Classic features Thrombosis - recurrent Thrombocytopaenia Miscarriages - recurrent
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Anti-phospholipid syndrome Associated with connective tissue disease - especially SLE Overlaps with ITP - idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura May have clinical features like - TTP - thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura ??
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Case 8 - 2006 Remained well for 10 years Developed mild arthritis dsDNA antibody positive
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Case 8 - January 2006 Dyspnoea on exertion Anaemia, low WCC, low platelets Hypertension Marked lower limb oedema
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Case 8 - 2006 Casts - red cells in urine Marked proteinuria - nephrotic Renal biopsy - diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis (class IV) Diagnosis - SLE
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The end Next term Immunodeficiency disorders Allergy
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