Abstract

The concept of shared autoimmunity comprises various forms of disease: rheumatic diseases in several members of the same family, the coincidence of autoimmune rheumatic with non-rheumatic diseases in relatives of patients, the presence of autoantibodies in healthy relatives of autoimmune disease patients, and the development of two or more autoimmune rheumatic diseases in one patient, the so-called overlap syndromes. The genetic and environmental factors that lead to these phenomena interact in a complex fashion and influence the distinct phenotypic characteristics of each patient. In a previous case series, we described 23 Mexican Mestizo patients with overlap syndromes. Interestingly, rhupus tends to develop sequentially while sclerodermatomyositis tends to appear simultaneously. The clinical course of the other overlap syndromes is rather aggressive, although clinical manifestations respond to standard treatment. The second and/or third disease appears while the first one is still active, even with adequate treatment. The distinct course of overlap syndromes may be partially explained by the interplay of environmental factors with genes that predispose to autoimmunity in general and to manifestations of specific diseases. The analyses of genes that will help understand the pathophysiology of these diseases include several MHC complex genes, cytokines, AIRE, and PDCD1 amongst others.

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