Abstract

Macrophage activation syndrome (MAS) has been reported in association with many rheumatic diseases, most commonly in systemic juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (sJRA). Clinically, MAS is similar to hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH), a genetic disorder with absent or depressed natural killer (NK) function. We have previously reported that, as in HLH, patients with MAS have profoundly decreased NK activity, suggesting that this abnormality might be relevant to the pathogenesis of the syndrome. Here we examined the extent of NK dysfunction across the spectrum of diseases that comprise juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (JRA). Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were collected from patients with pauciarticular (n = 4), polyarticular (n = 16), and systemic (n = 20) forms of JRA. NK cytolytic activity was measured after co-incubation of PBMC with the NK-sensitive K562 cell line. NK cells (CD56+/T cell receptor [TCR]-αβ-), NK T cells (CD56+/TCR-αβ+), and CD8+ T cells were also assessed for perforin and granzyme B expression by flow cytometry. Overall, NK cytolytic activity was significantly lower in patients with sJRA than in other JRA patients and controls. In a subgroup of patients with predominantly sJRA, NK cell activity was profoundly decreased: in 10 of 20 patients with sJRA and in only 1 of 20 patients with other JRA, levels of NK activity were below two standard deviations of pediatric controls (P = 0.002). Some decrease in perforin expression in NK cells and cytotoxic T lymphocytes was seen in patients within each of the JRA groups with no statistically significant differences. There was a profound decrease in the proportion of circulating CD56bright NK cells in three sJRA patients, a pattern similar to that previously observed in MAS and HLH. In conclusion, a subgroup of patients with JRA who have not yet had an episode of MAS showed decreased NK function and an absence of circulating CD56bright population, similar to the abnormalities observed in patients with MAS and HLH. This phenomenon was particularly common in the systemic form of JRA, a clinical entity strongly associated with MAS.

Highlights

  • The term 'macrophage activation syndrome' (MAS) in pediatric rheumatology refers to a set of symptoms caused by the excessive activation and proliferation of T cells and welldifferentiated macrophages [1,2,3,4]

  • natural killer (NK) cell cytolytic activity and NK cell numbers As shown in Fig. 1, some decrease in NK cell cytolytic activity was noted in both clinical groups of juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (JRA) patients

  • In 10 of 20 patients with systemic juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (sJRA) and in only 1 of 20 patients with pauciarticular/polyarticular JRA, the NK cell cytolytic activity was below two standard deviations (SD) of the control group (χ2, P = 0.002)

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Summary

Introduction

The term 'macrophage activation syndrome' (MAS) in pediatric rheumatology refers to a set of symptoms caused by the excessive activation and proliferation of T cells and welldifferentiated macrophages [1,2,3,4]. IFN = interferon; HLH = hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis; JRA = juvenile rheumatoid arthritis; MAS = macrophage activation syndrome; NK = natural killer; MCF = mean channel fluorescence; sJRA = systemic juvenile rheumatoid arthritis; TCR = T cell receptor; TNF = tumor necrosis factor. The reason for the increased incidence of MAS in patients with systemic forms of JRA in comparison with other clinical forms of this disease is not clear, but NK cell abnormalities might have a role [3]. The main purpose of this cross-sectional study was to characterize numbers of circulating NK cells, their cytolytic activity, CD56bright : CD56dim subset ratio, and perforin/granzyme B expression in the major cytotoxic cell populations in patients with different clinical forms of JRA. The unpaired t-test and logistic regression analysis were used to assess the possible contribution of treatment regimens to the development of NK cell dysfunction

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