Baeten Dominique, Kruithof Elli, De Rycke Leen, Boots Anemieke M, Mielants Herman, Veys Eric M, De Keyser Filip
Department of Rheumatology, Ghent University Hospital, Ghent, Belgium.
Arthritis Res Ther. 2005;7(2):R359-69. doi: 10.1186/ar1501. Epub 2005 Jan 21.
Considering the relation between synovial inflammation and global disease activity in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and the distinct but heterogeneous histology of spondyloarthropathy (SpA) synovitis, the present study analyzed whether histopathological features of synovium reflect specific phenotypes and/or global disease activity in SpA. Synovial biopsies obtained from 99 SpA and 86 RA patients with active knee synovitis were analyzed for 15 histological and immunohistochemical markers. Correlations with swollen joint count, serum C-reactive protein concentrations, and erythrocyte sedimentation rate were analyzed using classical and multiparameter statistics. SpA synovitis was characterized by higher vascularity and infiltration with CD163+ macrophages and polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) and by lower values for lining-layer hyperplasia, lymphoid aggregates, CD1a+ cells, intracellular citrullinated proteins, and MHC-HC gp39 complexes than RA synovitis. Unsupervised clustering of the SpA samples based on synovial features identified two separate clusters that both contained different SpA subtypes but were significantly differentiated by concentration of C-reactive protein and erythrocyte sedimentation rate. Global disease activity in SpA correlated significantly with lining-layer hyperplasia as well as with inflammatory infiltration with macrophages, especially the CD163+ subset, and with PMNs. Accordingly, supervised clustering using these synovial parameters identified a cluster of 20 SpA patients with significantly higher disease activity, and this finding was confirmed in an independent SpA cohort. However, multiparameter models based on synovial histopathology were relatively poor predictors of disease activity in individual patients. In conclusion, these data indicate that inflammatory infiltration of the synovium with CD163+ macrophages and PMNs as well as lining-layer hyperplasia reflect global disease activity in SpA, independently of the SpA subtype. These data support a prominent role for innate immune cells in SpA synovitis and warrant further evaluation of synovial histopathology as a surrogate marker in early-phase therapeutic trials in SpA.
考虑到类风湿关节炎(RA)中滑膜炎与整体疾病活动之间的关系以及脊柱关节炎(SpA)滑膜炎独特但异质性的组织学表现,本研究分析了滑膜的组织病理学特征是否反映SpA的特定表型和/或整体疾病活动。对99例SpA患者和86例有活动性膝关节滑膜炎的RA患者的滑膜活检组织进行了15种组织学和免疫组化标志物分析。使用经典统计学和多参数统计学分析了与肿胀关节计数、血清C反应蛋白浓度和红细胞沉降率的相关性。SpA滑膜炎的特征是血管化程度更高,CD163 +巨噬细胞和多形核白细胞(PMN)浸润更多,与RA滑膜炎相比,其衬里层增生、淋巴滤泡、CD1a +细胞、细胞内瓜氨酸化蛋白和MHC-HC gp39复合物的值更低。基于滑膜特征对SpA样本进行无监督聚类,识别出两个独立的聚类,这两个聚类均包含不同的SpA亚型,但通过C反应蛋白浓度和红细胞沉降率可显著区分。SpA中的整体疾病活动与衬里层增生以及巨噬细胞尤其是CD163 +亚群的炎性浸润和PMN显著相关。因此,使用这些滑膜参数进行监督聚类,识别出一组疾病活动明显更高的20例SpA患者,这一发现在一个独立的SpA队列中得到了证实。然而,基于滑膜组织病理学的多参数模型对个体患者疾病活动的预测相对较差。总之,这些数据表明,CD163 +巨噬细胞和PMN对滑膜的炎性浸润以及衬里层增生反映了SpA中的整体疾病活动,与SpA亚型无关。这些数据支持固有免疫细胞在SpA滑膜炎中起重要作用,并保证在SpA的早期治疗试验中进一步评估滑膜组织病理学作为替代标志物。