Abstract

ObjectivesFrench national guidelines recommend searching for anti-SS-A antibodies during the second-line assessment of stroke in adults < 55 years of age in the absence of an identified etiology. We aimed to assess the impact of finding anti-SS-A antibodies during the etiological investigations of stroke in young adults. MethodsMedical files from all patients ≤ 55 years of age admitted to a single stroke unit during a five-year period and for whom anti-SS-A antibodies were positive were retrospectively analyzed. ResultsTwelve patients were included (9 women; median age 48.5 years), with a rate of anti-SS-A antibody positivity of 1.6% (95% confidence interval [0.71–2.55] %; 12/735 admissions). The etiologies of the 12 ischemic events based on the TOAST classification were large-artery atherosclerosis (n = 1), cardioembolism (n = 1), small-vessel disease (n = 1), other determined etiology (n = 3), multiple etiology (n = 1), and no determined etiology (n = 5). A connective tissue disease (CTD) was discovered in 8/12 patients (1 primary Sjögren's Syndrome, 1 mixed CTD, 1 systemic sclerosis, 2 antiphospholipid syndromes, 1 undetermined CTD, 2 lupus). Anti-SSA antibodies were not directly responsible for the stroke in any of the 12 cases. A link between the autoimmune disease and the neurological vascular episode could be hypothesized for four patients, but it never influenced the therapeutic decision. ConclusionsFinding anti-SS-A antibodies during the etiological assessment of a stroke of young adults is rare. However, it may be worthwhile to refer the patient to a rheumatologist/an internist because CTD may be discovered and may require specific follow-up.

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