Abstract

Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is a rare rheumatic disease characterised by inflammation, vasculopathy and fibrosis of skin and internal organs. A common complication and a leading cause of death in SSc is interstitial lung disease (ILD). The current armamentarium of treatments in SSc-ILD mainly includes immunosuppressive therapies and has recently been expanded with anti-fibrotic agent nintedanib. Autologous stem cell transplantation (SCT) is increasingly used in progressive diffuse cutaneous SSc. This intensive treatment has been studied in three randomised trials and demonstrated to improve survival and quality of life. In the subsets of patients with SSc-ILD, SCT resulted in stabilisation and modest improvement of lung volumes and disease extent on high resolution computed tomography, but less impact was seen on diffusion capacity. Comparison of SCT outcomes with results from SSc-ILD trials is difficult though, as lung involvement per se was not an inclusion criterion in all SCT trials. Also, baseline characteristics differed between studies. The risk of severe treatment-related complications from SCT is still considerable and patients with extensive lung disease are particularly at risk of complications during transplantation. Therefore SCT should only be provided by experienced multidisciplinary teams in carefully selected patients. Future research needs to include comprehensive pulmonary evaluation and establish whether SCT early in the disease might prevent irreversible pulmonary damage and reduce treatment-related complications. Also, more insight in mechanisms of action of SCT in the lung and predictors for response will improve the use of this treatment in SSc-ILD. In this review the role of SCT in the treatment of SSc-ILD is summarised.

Highlights

  • Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is a rare connective tissue disease characterised by inflammation, vasculopathy and fibrosis of skin and internal organs.[1]

  • In this review we summarise the evidence on the effects of stem cell transplantation (SCT) on SSc-interstitial lung disease (ILD) and discuss the potential role of SCT in the treatment of SSc-ILD

  • Patients treated with SCT showed decreased ILD scores and stable lung fibrosis compared with patients treated with CYC in the control arm

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is a rare connective tissue disease characterised by inflammation, vasculopathy and fibrosis of skin and internal organs.[1]. A previous analysis in this cohort (N = 57, median age 40 years, 70% female, 88% dcSSc, median disease duration at SCT 36 months) showed no significant change in FVC or DLco during a follow-up period of 36 months, serial long function parameters were available in only a small number of patients (n = 26 at 12 months, n = 18 at 24 months and n = 10 at 36 months) and 31% of patients had pulmonary arterial hypertension, which could influence lung function results too.[33]. A German study used automated quantitative analysis on HRCTs of 26 patients (median age 41 years, 54% female, median disease duration 3.5 years) treated with SCT at 6 months and 2 years of follow-up.[40] Based on FVC at 6 months patients were classified as responders (n = 20) and non-responders (n = 6) In these 20 responders DLco significantly improved and total lung volume increased, lung density and high attenuation values decreased significantly. Structural and architectural properties of involved lung tissue parenchyma on chest computed tomography were analysed in 23 patients.[41]

Effect on HRCT
Inclusion criteria
ATG or cyclophosphamide toxicity
TRALI after transfusion
Findings
Discussion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call