Abstract
Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is heterogenous on molecular, cellular, tissue, and clinical levels. Although many biomarkers have been described in clinical studies, few have been rigorously mapped to specific molecular pathways, tissue pathologies, and clinical manifestations. A focused assessment of peripheral blood levels of C-C Motif Chemokine Ligand-18 (CCL18) and periostin illustrates how biomarkers can link molecular mediators to clinical outcomes. CCL18 is produced by pulmonary macrophages in response to type 2 cytokines and IL6. Elevated serum CCL18 is associated with interstitial lung disease (ILD) in SSc patients and is prognostic for ILD progression. It is pharmacologically modulated by IL6 inhibition, and associated with stabilization of lung function decline but not with improvements in skin fibrosis. Periostin is produced by dermal fibroblasts in SSc in response to type 2 cytokines and transforming growth factor-beta. Elevated serum periostin is associated with cutaneous disease in SSc patients but not ILD. Other cell- and tissue-specific biomarkers detectable in peripheral blood and informative with respect to SSc pathogenesis include KL-6 and SP-D in lung epithelium, osteopontin in lung macrophages, and cartilage oligomeric matrix protein in dermal fibroblasts. Blood biomarkers related to specific molecular mediators, cell types, and tissues of origin can help to link therapeutic targets to treatable traits in SSc.
Published Version
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