Abstract

Study objectives Sarcoidosis is a granulomatous disorder with heterogeneous clinical manifestations, which are potentially reflective of a syndrome with different etiologies leading to similar histologic findings. We examined the relationship between environmental and occupational exposures, and the clinical phenotype of sarcoidosis. Design We performed a cross-sectional study of incident sarcoidosis cases that had been identified by A Case Control Etiologic Study of Sarcoidosis. Subjects were categorized into the following two groups: (1) pulmonary-only disease; and (2) systemic disease (with or without pulmonary involvement). Logistic regression was used to examine the associations of candidate exposures with clinical phenotype. Setting Ten academic medical centers across the United States. Patients The current study included 718 subjects in whom sarcoidosis had been diagnosed within 6 months of study enrollment. Patients met the following criteria prior to enrollment: (1) tissue confirmation of noncaseating granulomas on tissue biopsy on one or more organs within 6 months of study enrollment with negative stains for acid-fast bacilli and fungus; (2) clinical signs or symptoms that were consistent with sarcoidosis; (3) no other obvious explanation for the granulomatous disease; and (4) age > 18 years. Measurements and results Several exposures were associated with significantly less likelihood of having extrapulmonary disease in multivariate analysis, including agricultural organic dusts and wood burning. The effects of many of these exposures were significantly different in patients of different self-defined race. Conclusions The differentiation of sarcoidosis subjects on the basis of clinical phenotypes suggests that these subgroups may have unique environmental exposure associations. Self-defined race may play a role in the determination of the effect of certain exposures on disease phenotypes.

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