Abstract

Background:It has been suggested that a capillary scleroderma pattern in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)-patients predisposes for clinical signs of systemic sclerosis (SSc) or overlap disease (1). However, this was previously shown not to be the case in a cross-sectional study in childhood-onset SLE (cSLE) (2).Objectives:To assess if nailfold capillary patterns in cSLE change over time and if a capillary scleroderma pattern is associated with prospective development of clinical SSc-features, higher SLE disease activity or –damage.Methods:Prospective clinical and capillaroscopy data were used from a longitudinal cohort of cSLE patients. Patients with a disease onset before the age of 18 years and diagnosis according to SLICC 2012 criteria were included. Disease activity was defined by SLEDAI score and disease damage by the SLICC damage index. Nailfold images from eight fingers (excluding thumbs) were obtained by videocapillaroscopy. A scleroderma pattern was defined according to the ‘fast track algorithm’ (3). An abnormal capillary pattern that did not match the criteria for a scleroderma pattern was defined as ‘microangiopathy’.Results:Our longitudinal study cohort consisted of n=53 cSLE patients with a median disease onset of 14 years (IQR 12.5-15.5 years) and a median SLEDAI score at diagnosis of 11 (IQR 8-15.5). Clinical follow-up data were available from 0.5-16 years after disease onset. Median disease duration at first capillaroscopy was 17 months (IQR 5.5-51.5 months) and 17/53 (32.1%) of patients had Raynaud’s phenomenon. In total, n=9 (17%) showed a scleroderma pattern (at some point in time), n=37 (70%) had microangiopathy and n=7 (13%) showed a normal capillary pattern. N=27 patients had follow up with capillaroscopy (1-7 times over 1-5 years). In most patients (23/27) we did not observe any change in capillary pattern during follow-up. Two patients showed changes from microangiopathy to a scleroderma pattern, one patient from a scleroderma pattern to microangiopathy and one patient from microangiopathy to a normal pattern. Raynaud’s phenomenon was equally distributed among patients with different capillaroscopy patterns (p=0.487), as was median SLEDAI score at diagnosis (p=0.285). Follow-up patients with a capillary scleroderma pattern did not show any clinical features for SSc over time (follow-up over 1-5 years, Table 1 below. Patients with a capillary scleroderma pattern showed significantly more disease damage (Chi-square, p=0.008), also indicated by a survival analysis for disease damage (Figure 1, p=0.042).Conclusion:Our study indicates that a capillary scleroderma pattern in cSLE correlates with disease damage but not with clinical SSc features during follow-up period.

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