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708 result(s) for "Scleroderma, Systemic - physiopathology"
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Predictors of lung function test severity and outcome in systemic sclerosis-associated interstitial lung disease
Systemic sclerosis-related interstitial lung disease (SSc-ILD) is the leading cause of death in SSc. In this study, we aimed to describe the baseline severity and evolution of forced vital capacity (FVC) and diffusing capacity for carbon monoxide (DLCO) in patients with SSc-ILD and to assess the baseline clinical, biological and high-resolution CT scan (HRCT) predictors of this evolution. Baseline and serial FVC and DLCO were collected in 75 SSc-ILD patients followed during 6.4±4.2 years (n = 557 individual data). FVC and DLCO evolution was modelled using a linear mixed model with random effect. During follow-up, FVC was stable while DLCO significantly decreased (-1.5±0.3%/year (p<0.0001). Baseline NYHA functional class III/IV, extensive SSc-ILD on HRCT and DLCO<80% were associated with a lower baseline FVC. Absence of digital ulcers extensive SSc-ILD, and FVC<80% and were associated with a lower baseline DLCO. Presence or history of digital ulcers and presence of pulmonary hypertension at baseline or during follow-up were associated with a faster decline of DLCO overtime. Neither age, gender, subtype of SSc nor specificity of autoantibodies were associated with baseline severity or outcome of lung function tests. In this SSc-ILD population, FVC was therefore stable while DLCO significantly declined over time. ILD extension was associated with baseline FVC and DLCO but not with their evolution. Presence or history of digital ulcers and pulmonary hypertension were predictors of a faster decline of DLCO over time.
Autologous non-myeloablative haemopoietic stem-cell transplantation compared with pulse cyclophosphamide once per month for systemic sclerosis (ASSIST): an open-label, randomised phase 2 trial
Non-randomised studies of haemopoietic stem-cell transplantation (HSCT) in systemic sclerosis have shown improvements in lung function and skin flexibility but high treatment-related mortality. We aimed to assess safety and efficacy of autologous non-myeloablative HSCT in a phase 2 trial compared with the standard of care, cyclophosphamide. In our open-label, randomised, controlled phase 2 trial, we consecutively enrolled patients at Northwestern Memorial Hospital (Chicago, IL, USA) who were aged younger than 60 years with diffuse systemic sclerosis, modified Rodnan skin scores (mRSS) of more than 14, and internal organ involvement or restricted skin involvement (mRSS <14) but coexistent pulmonary involvement. We randomly allocated patients 1:1 by use of a computer-generated sequence with a mixed block design (blocks of ten and four) to receive HSCT, 200 mg/kg intravenous cyclophosphamide, and 6·5 mg/kg intravenous rabbit antithymocyte globulin or to receive 1·0 g/m 2 intravenous cyclophosphamide once per month for 6 months. The primary outcome for all enrolled patients was improvement at 12 months' follow-up, defined as a decrease in mRSS (>25% for those with initial mRSS >14) or an increase in forced vital capacity by more than 10%. Patients in the control group with disease progression (>25% increase in mRSS or decrease of >10% in forced vital capacity) despite treatment with cyclophosphamide could switch to HSCT 12 months after enrolment. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00278525. Between Jan 18, 2006, and Nov 10, 2009 we enrolled 19 patients. All ten patients randomly allocated to receive HSCT improved at or before 12 months' follow-up, compared with none of nine allocated to cyclophosphamide (odds ratio 110, 95% CI 14·04–∞; p=0·00001). Eight of nine controls had disease progression (without interval improvement) compared with no patients treated by HSCT (p=0·0001), and seven patients switched to HSCT. Compared with baseline, data for 11 patients with follow-up to 2 years after HSCT suggested that improvements in mRSS (p<0·0001) and forced vital capacity (p<0·03) persisted. Non-myeloablative autologous HSCT improves skin and pulmonary function in patients with systemic sclerosis for up to 2 years and is preferable to the current standard of care, but longer follow-up is needed. None
Trajectories of forced vital capacity in patients with systemic sclerosis-associated interstitial lung disease
We used data from the SENSCIS and SENSCIS-ON trials to assess decline in forced vital capacity (FVC) in patients with systemic sclerosis-associated interstitial lung disease (SSc-ILD) who received long-term treatment with nintedanib and the effect of switching patients from placebo to nintedanib. In the SENSCIS trial, patients were randomised to receive nintedanib or placebo until the last patient reached week 52 but for ≤ 100 weeks. In SENSCIS-ON, the extension to SENSCIS, all patients received open-label nintedanib. Per protocol, the off-treatment period between these trials was ≤ 12 weeks. We assessed the trajectory of FVC in patients who received nintedanib in SENSCIS and continued nintedanib in SENSCIS-ON ( n  = 197) and in patients who received placebo in SENSCIS and initiated nintedanib in SENSCIS-ON ( n  = 231). The last on-treatment measurement in SENSCIS and the baseline measurement of SENSCIS-ON were considered anchor measurements. In patients who received nintedanib in SENSCIS, the mean decline in FVC in the 52 weeks prior to the last on-treatment measurement in SENSCIS was − 41.5 mL and the mean decline in FVC from baseline to week 52 of SENSCIS-ON was − 58.3 mL. In patients who received placebo in SENSCIS, the mean decline in FVC in the 52 weeks prior to the last on-treatment measurement in SENSCIS was − 96.8 mL and the mean decline in FVC from baseline to week 52 of SENSCIS-ON (when patients received nintedanib) was − 42.8 mL. These findings illustrate the progressive nature of SSc-ILD and support the efficacy of nintedanib in slowing decline in lung function over the long term.
A composite endpoint for systemic sclerosis-associated interstitial lung disease: association with mortality in two clinical trial cohorts
Background The forced vital capacity (FVC) is the most commonly used endpoint in registrational trials for systemic sclerosis-associated interstitial lung disease (SSc-ILD). However, the FVC has known methodological pitfalls, is affected by extra-pulmonary SSc manifestations and may not be clinically meaningful to patients. Combining individual outcomes into a composite endpoint is an attractive alternative for measuring treatment response and augmenting statistical efficiency in SSc-ILD trials. Methods We previously developed a composite endpoint for SSc-ILD using data from the Scleroderma Lung Study (SLS) I (comparing cyclophosphamide versus placebo for SSc-ILD), which included physiological (FVC), radiological (quantitative extent of fibrosis in the zone of maximum involvement) and patient-reported outcomes (transitional dyspnea index and health assessment disability questionnaire), which demonstrated a more robust treatment effect of cyclophosphamide than the FVC alone. The purpose of this post-hoc analysis was to validate this composite endpoint in an external clinical trial cohort (SLS II [cyclophosphamide versus mycophenolate for SSc-ILD). A secondary goal was to determine whether the composite endpoint predicted long-term mortality in SLS I and II. Results Seventy-two of the 142 randomized participants in SLS II had all composite endpoint components at 24 months and were included in this analysis. In both SLS I and II, the standardized effect size (Cohen’s d) was greater when the composite endpoint model was applied than when the FVC alone model was applied. In SLS I and II, the composite endpoint was a better predictor of long-term survival (HR 0.76 vs. 0.98 and 0.59 vs. 0.98, for the composite index vs. FVC Cox proportional hazards models in SLS I and II, respectively). Patients with high composite outcomes scores in both SLS I and II had significantly worse long-term survival than patients with low scores ( p  = 0.039 for log-rank test). Conclusion The results of this post-hoc analysis provide further evidence that a composite endpoint comprised of physiological, radiological and patient-reported outcomes is a promising endpoint for SSc-ILD trials. Future validation studies are needed. Trial registration SLS II: NCT00883129 (Date of registration April 17, 2009); SLS I: NCT00004563 (Date of registration: February 10, 2000).
Interstitial Lung Disease in Systemic Sclerosis: A Simple Staging System
In interstitial lung disease complicating systemic sclerosis (SSc-ILD), the optimal prognostic use of baseline pulmonary function tests (PFTs) and high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) is uncertain. To construct a readily applicable prognostic algorithm in SSc-ILD, integrating PFTs and HRCT. The prognostic value of baseline PFT and HRCT variables was quantified in patients with SSc-ILD (n = 215) against survival and serial PFT data. Increasingly extensive disease on HRCT was a powerful predictor of mortality (P < 0.0005), with an optimal extent threshold of 20%. In patients with HRCT extent of 10-30% (termed indeterminate disease), an FVC threshold of 70% was an adequate prognostic substitute. On the basis of these observations, SSc-ILD was staged as limited disease (minimal disease on HRCT or, in indeterminate cases, FVC >or= 70%) or extensive disease (severe disease on HRCT or, in indeterminate cases, FVC < 70%). This system (hazards ratio [HR], 3.46; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.19-5.46; P < 0.0005) was more discriminatory than an HRCT threshold of 20% (HR, 2.48; 95% CI, 1.57-3.92; P < 0.0005) or an FVC threshold of 70% (HR, 2.11; 95% CI, 1.34-3.32; P = 0.001). The system was evaluated by four trainees and four practitioners, with minimal and severe disease on HRCT defined as clearly < 20% or clearly > 20%, respectively, and the use of an FVC threshold of 70% in indeterminate cases. The staging system was predictive of mortality for all scorers, with prognostic separation higher for practitioners (HR, 3.39-3.82) than trainees (HR, 1.87-2.60). An easily applicable limited/extensive staging system for SSc-ILD, based on combined evaluation with HRCT and PFTs, provides discriminatory prognostic information.
Relationship between quantitative radiographic assessments of interstitial lung disease and physiological and clinical features of systemic sclerosis
ObjectivesExtent of systemic sclerosis (SSc)-related interstitial lung disease (ILD) assessed from thoracic high-resolution CT (HRCT) predicts disease course, mortality and treatment response. While quantitative HRCT analyses of extent of lung fibrosis (QLFib) or total interstitial lung disease (QILD) are more sensitive and reproducible than visual HRCT assessments of SSc-ILD, these analyses are not widely available. This study evaluates the relationship between clinical disease parameters and QLFib and QILD scores to identify potential surrogate measures of radiographic extent of ILD.MethodsUsing baseline data from the Scleroderma Lung Study I (SLS I; N=158), multivariate regression analyses were performed using the best subset selection method to identify one to five variable models that best correlated with QLFib and QILD scores in both whole lung (WL) and the zone of maximal involvement (ZM). These models were subsequently validated using baseline data from SLS II (N=142). Bivariate analyses of the radiographic and clinical variables were also performed using pooled data. SLS I and II did not include patients with clinically significant pulmonary hypertension (PH).ResultsDiffusing capacity for carbon monoxide (DLCO) was the single best predictor of both QLF and QILD in the WL and ZM in all of the best subset models. Adding other disease parameters to the models did not substantially improve model performance. Forced vital capacity (FVC) did not predict QLF or QILD scores in any of the models.ConclusionsIn the absence of PH, DLCO provides the best overall estimate of HRCT-measured lung disease in patients from two large SSc cohorts. FVC, although commonly used, may not be the best surrogate measure of extent of SSc-ILD at any point in time.Trial registration numbersSLS I: www.clinicaltrials.gov NCT 00000-4563; SLS II: www.clinicaltrials.gov NCT 00883129.
Effect of mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) on systemic sclerosis-related interstitial lung disease with mildly impaired lung function: a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized trial
The efficacy and safety of mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) has been studied in patients with systemic sclerosis (SSc)-related interstitial lung disease (ILD) with moderate–severe impairment. There is no study on its use in patients with mildly impaired lung function. The objective of this study is to determine the efficacy and safety of MMF for treating mild SSc-ILD (forced vital capacity (FVC) ≥ 70% predicted). This was a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled pilot trial. The subjects with SSc-ILD with FVC ≥ 70% were randomized to receive either MMF (2 g/day) or placebo for 6 months. FVC, diffusing capacity of lungs for carbon monoxide (DLCO), modified Rodnan skin score (mRSS), Short Form-36 (SF36v2), Mahler’s Dyspnoea Index (MDI), and 6-min walk distance (6MWD) were recorded at baseline and at 6 months. Forty-one subjects were included in the study (MMF: 20, placebo: 21). FVC decreased by a median of 2.7% (range − 21 to 9) in MMF arm and increased by 1% (range − 6 to 10) in placebo arm (p = 0.131). SF36v2 scores improved in both the groups. Median change in MDI (3 vs 3), DLCO (1% vs 1.5%), and 6MWD (0 m vs 0 m) was similar between the study groups. MMF was effective in improving mRSS (− 5 vs − 1, p = 0.045) compared to placebo. Adverse events occurred with similar frequency in both the study groups. In this pilot study, MMF did not result in significant improvement in lung function in SSc-ILD with minimally impaired lung function, but was effective in reducing the skin tightness. Larger studies are needed to confirm these findings. This study was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02896205).
Effects of multimodal nutritional intervention on nutritional status and clinical outcomes in patients with systemic sclerosis: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial
IntroductionSystemic sclerosis (SSc) is an autoimmune disorder causing progressive fibrosis of internal organs and skin, leading to increased thickness and rigidity. It frequently results in malnutrition, which can decrease survival rates and physical performance, while also imposing financial burdens on healthcare systems and society. Multimodal nutritional interventions may encompass various approaches, including nutritional counselling, consumption of oral nutritional supplements and disease-specific dietary regimens based on nutritional needs. The present clinical trial is designed to examine the effectiveness of multimodal nutritional intervention on nutritional status, quality of life, food intake, body composition and fatigue in patients with SSc.Methods and analysisThis is a parallel, randomised, placebo-controlled clinical trial that will investigate the impacts of multimodal nutritional interventions in SSc patients. 46 qualified SSc participants will be chosen at random and given multimodal nutritional intervention or dietary recommendations for a period of 8 weeks. The primary outcomes of this study are changes in nutritional status and quality of life. The secondary outcomes include changes in body composition, fatigue, body weight, body mass index and calf circumference. Statistical analysis will be conducted using the SPSS software (Version 24).Ethics and disseminationThe current trial received approval from the Medical Ethics Committee of Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran (IR.TUMS.MEDICINE.REC.1403.345). The findings will be submitted to international, peer-reviewed publications and presented at national and international conferences.Trial registration numberIRCT20220208053971N4.
Scleroderma lung study (SLS): differences in the presentation and course of patients with limited versus diffuse systemic sclerosis
Objectives:Pulmonary fibrosis is a leading cause of death in systemic sclerosis (SSc). This report examines the differences at baseline and over 12 months between patients with limited versus diffuse cutaneous SSc who participated in the Scleroderma Lung Study.Methods:SSc patients (64 limited; 94 diffuse) exhibiting dyspnoea on exertion, restrictive pulmonary function and evidence of alveolitis on bronchoalveolar lavage and/or high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) were randomised to receive cyclophosphamide (CYC) or placebo and serially evaluated over 12 months.Results:Baseline measures of alveolitis, dyspnoea and pulmonary function were similar in limited and diffuse SSc. However, differences were noted with respect to HRCT-scored fibrosis (worse in limited SSc), and to functional activity, quality of life, skin and musculoskeletal manifestations (worse in diffuse SSc) (p<0.05). When adjusted for the baseline level of fibrosis, both groups responded similarly to CYC with regard to lung function and dyspnoea (p<0.05). Cyclophosphamide was also associated with more improvement in skin score in the diffuse disease group more than in the limited disease group (p<0.05).Conclusions:After adjusting for the severity of fibrosis at baseline, CYC slowed the decline of lung volumes and improved dyspnoea equally in the limited and the diffuse SSc groups. On the other hand, diffuse SSc patients responded better than limited patients with respect to improvements in skin thickening.
Investigating the effectiveness and feasibility of exercise on microvascular reactivity and quality of life in systemic sclerosis patients: study protocol for a feasibility study
Background Raynaud’s phenomenon is one of the first clinical manifestations observed in systemic sclerosis (SSc). This microvasculature disorder affects mostly the digits in over 95% of SSc patients, significantly affecting their health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and incurring higher hospital admissions and other healthcare costs. Exercise is known to improve both micro- and macrovascular function – aerobic exercise and resistance training, separately or combined, have been demonstrated to lead to significant vasculo-physiological improvements in conditions that present vasculopathy. However, the effects of a combined exercise programme on microcirculation in SSc patients has yet to be investigated. Therefore, the purpose of this study is to assess the effects of high-intensity interval training (HIIT) combined with circuit resistance training on the microvascular function in the digital area of SSc patients. Methods This will be a randomised controlled, feasibility trial with two arms, wherein 30 patients with SSc in receipt of medical treatment will be randomly assigned to usual care (medical treatment) or to a 12-week supervised exercise programme. Patients in the exercise group will undertake two, 45-min sessions each week consisting of 30 min HIIT (30 s 100% peak power output/30 s passive recovery) on the arm crank ergometer and 15 min of upper body circuit resistance training. Patients will be assessed before as well as at 3 and 6 months following randomisation. Primary outcomes of the study will be recruitment and retention rate, intervention acceptability and adherence to the exercise programme. Secondary outcomes include the digital area cutaneous microvascular function (laser Doppler fluximetry combined with iontophoresis), physical fitness, functional ability, upper back transcutaneous oxygen tension, body composition and quality of life (EQ-5D-5L). Selected interviews with a subsample of patients will be undertaken to explore their experiences of having Raynaud’s phenomenon and the acceptability of the exercise intervention and study procedures. Discussion Data from this study will be used to identify the feasibility of a combined exercise programme to be implemented in SSc patients, the acceptability of the intervention and the study design, and to determine the effects of exercise on the microvasculature. Overall, this study will provide sufficient data to inform and support a full multicentre clinical trial. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT number): NCT03058887 , February 23, 2017.