Abstract
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a heterogeneous autoimmune disease. Cardiac involvement is rare but plays an important prognostic role. The degree of cardiac involvement according to SLE subsets defined by non-cardiac manifestations is unknown. The objective of this study was to identify differences in TTE parameters associated with different SLE subgroups. One hundred and eighty-one patients fulfilling the ACR/EULAR 2019 classification criteria for SLE and had a TTE were included in this cross-sectional study. We defined four subsets of SLE based on the predominant clinical manifestations. A multivariate multinomial regression analysis was performed to determine whether TTE parameters differ between the subsets. The first subset (n = 37) of patients showed features of mixed connective tissue disease (MCTD); the second subset (n = 76) had primarily cutaneous involvement; the third subset (n = 18) exhibited serositis and the last subset (n = 50) had severe disease with significant organ involvement, including renal involvement. Forty TTE parameters were assessed in each patient. Using a multivariate multinomial regression analysis, 3 parameters differed between groups: early diastolic tricuspid annular velocity (RV-E′, P < 0.0001), RV-S′ (RV-pulse DTI systolic peak wave, P = 0.0031), and RV end-diastole diameter (P = 0.0419). The degree of RV dysfunction was lowest in patients with primarily cutaneous involvement. Four distinct clinical subsets based on clinical manifestations differed in terms of TTE parameters of right heart function and diastolic dysfunction. This could help to tailor the cardiac follow-up required by the different clinical subsets of SLE.
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