Stanford Center for Lymphatic and Venous Disorders, Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Stanford University, School of Medicine, Stanford, California, USA.
Department of Genetics, Stanford University, School of Medicine, Stanford, California, USA.
Clin Transl Med. 2022 Apr;12(4):e760. doi: 10.1002/ctm2.760.
The lymphatic contribution to the circulation is of paramount importance in regulating fluid homeostasis, immune cell trafficking/activation and lipid metabolism. In comparison to the blood vasculature, the impact of the lymphatics has been underappreciated, both in health and disease, likely due to a less well-delineated anatomy and function. Emerging data suggest that lymphatic dysfunction can be pivotal in the initiation and development of a variety of diseases across broad organ systems. Understanding the clinical associations between lymphatic dysfunction and non-lymphatic morbidity provides valuable evidence for future investigations and may foster the discovery of novel biomarkers and therapies.
We retrospectively analysed the electronic medical records of 724 patients referred to the Stanford Center for Lymphatic and Venous Disorders. Patients with an established lymphatic diagnosis were assigned to groups of secondary lymphoedema, lipoedema or primary lymphovascular disease. Individuals found to have no lymphatic disorder were served as the non-lymphatic controls. The prevalence of comorbid conditions was enumerated. Pairwise co-occurrence pattern analyses, validated by Jaccard similarity tests, was utilised to investigate disease-disease interrelationships.
Comorbidity analyses underscored the expected relationship between the presence of secondary lymphoedema and those diseases that damage the lymphatics. Cardiovascular conditions were common in all lymphatic subgroups. Additionally, statistically significant alteration of disease-disease interrelationships was noted in all three lymphatic categories when compared to the control population.
The presence or absence of a lymphatic disease significantly influences disease interrelationships in the study cohorts. As a physiologic substrate, the lymphatic circulation may be an underappreciated participant in disease pathogenesis. These relationships warrant further, prospective scrutiny and study.
淋巴系统对循环系统的贡献对于调节体液平衡、免疫细胞的迁移和激活以及脂质代谢至关重要。与血管系统相比,淋巴系统的影响在健康和疾病中都被低估了,这可能是由于其解剖和功能不太明确。新出现的数据表明,淋巴功能障碍可能在各种疾病的发生和发展中起关键作用,这些疾病涉及广泛的器官系统。了解淋巴功能障碍与非淋巴发病率之间的临床关联为未来的研究提供了有价值的证据,并可能促进新型生物标志物和治疗方法的发现。
我们回顾性分析了斯坦福淋巴血管疾病中心 724 名患者的电子病历。将确诊为淋巴疾病的患者分为继发性淋巴水肿、脂肪水肿或原发性淋巴血管疾病组。将无淋巴疾病的患者作为非淋巴对照组。列举了合并症的患病率。使用 Jaccard 相似性检验验证的成对共现模式分析,用于研究疾病之间的相互关系。
合并症分析强调了继发性淋巴水肿的存在与那些损伤淋巴系统的疾病之间的预期关系。心血管疾病在所有淋巴亚组中都很常见。此外,与对照组相比,所有三个淋巴类别中都观察到疾病-疾病相互关系的统计学显著改变。
淋巴疾病的存在与否显著影响研究队列中疾病之间的相互关系。作为一种生理底物,淋巴循环可能是疾病发病机制中被低估的参与者。这些关系值得进一步前瞻性审查和研究。