Abstract

Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is characterized by multiple clinical manifestations. Vasculopathy is a main disease hallmark and ranges in severity from an exacerbated Raynaud phenomenon to pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). The potential involvement of the immune system in SSc-associated vascular abnormalities is not clear. Here, we set out to study SSc-related immune parameters and determine whether and which peripheral T cell subsets associate with vascular severity in SSc patients. Peripheral blood and clinical data were collected from 30 SSc patients, 5 patients with idiopathic PAH and 15 age and sex-matched healthy donors (HD). In this cross-sectional cohort, SSc patients with PAH (n = 15) were matched for their age, sex and medication with SSc patients with no signs of PAH (n = 15). Lymphocyte subsets were quantified by multi-colour flow cytometry. SSc patients exhibited elevated percentages of T peripheral helper cells (Tph), CD4+GZMB+ T cells and decreased levels of Th1 cells compared with HD. Increased presence of both CD4+ and CD8+ exhausted-like (CD28-) T cells, characterized by raised cytokine and cytotoxic signature, was also observed in SSc compared with HD blood. Furthermore, IL-4 expressing CD4+CD8+ T cells were significantly increased in SSc peripheral blood. Interestingly, the presence of PAH in SSc was accompanied by a distinct T helper profile, characterized by raised percentages of Th17 and Tph cells. SSc patients with severe vasculopathy (presence of PAH) exhibited a distinct T cell profile, suggesting a potential role of auto-immune inflammation in SSc vascular complications.

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