Aortitis is a classic manifestation of large vessel vasculitis. Antiphospholipid syndrome (APS), sometimes known as Hughes syndrome, is an acquired autoimmune disorder that manifests clinically as recurrent venous or arterial thrombosis. Patients with APS may also suffer from various underlying diseases, most frequently systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome (CAPS) is a rare but serious complication of APS characterized by failure of several organs due to diffuse microcirculatory thrombi. Its main manifestations involve the kidneys, lungs, heart and central nervous system, and require early diagnosis and rapid therapeutic management. While APS can affect virtually any blood vessel, aortitis is not a known symptom of APS. We report the case of a 36-year-old patient with APS and SLE who presented with CAPS during pregnancy, with no concomitant SLE flare. The first manifestation of CAPS was aortitis, preceding renal, cardiac and haematological manifestations. The outcome was favourable with combined treatment including corticosteroids, anticoagulants, plasma exchange and rituximab. We then carried out a literature search for papers describing the presence of aortitis in APS and/or SLE. In the cases of aortic involvement identified in the literature, including another case of CAPS, the occurrence of aortitis in SLE, often associated with the presence of antiphospholipid antibodies/APS, suggests that aortitis should be considered as an under-recognized manifestation and potential non-criterion feature of APS.
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a complex autoimmune disease, which can be clinically heterogeneous in the same patient over the disease process and has an unpredictable evolution. Although its prevalence is increasing, SLE remains a rare disease with frequent extra-articular manifestations managed by multiple specialists. Among these, the internist is a key player in the overall coordination of the care pathway. The dramatic improvement in the short-term prognosis of SLE observed over the past few decades has favoured the emergence of more chronic disease-associated morbidities, especially infectious, cardiovascular and/or related to sequelae, notably renal. Thus, every lupologist is confronted with the difficulty of having to address, in an educational, individualised but also systematic way, a certain number of key items on which the short-, medium- and long-term medical future of patients who develop SLE at a relatively young age depend. In recent years, in addition to the creation of a network of reference centres and the drafting of regularly updated national therapeutic guidelines and therapeutic education programs, international consensus about the factors to consider in SLE patients has been reached, including the definition of therapeutic objectives according to a treat-to-target (T2T) strategy. However, the translation of these new objectives/paradigms in real-life has encountered a number of difficulties. As part of a multidisciplinary team involving SLE patients, we developed practical tools in the form of CHECKLISTs addressing the problems of refractory SLE (D2T), the management of comorbidities and toxicities (BASICs), and, more recently, therapeutic de-escalation with a shared medical decision (T2U). It appears that there is an opportunity to transform the care pathway of SLE patients by allowing the implementation of these tools within adaptive structuring of the consultation, which has the advantage of defining a starting point within the care pathway as a common denominator for lupologists, regardless of their specialty or where they work.
Objective Recent studies have highlighted that systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is characterized by different types of symptoms: type 1 symptoms related to inflammation and disease activity and type 2 symptoms such as fatigue, anxiety-depression, and pain. Our aim was to investigate the relation between type 1 and type 2 symptoms, and their impact on health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in SLE. Methods A literature review was conducted about disease activity/type1 and type 2 symptoms. Articles in English published after 2000 were located on Medline via Pubmed. The articles chosen evaluated at least one type 2 symptom or HRQoL using a validated scale in adult patients. Results Overall, 182 articles were analyzed and 115 were retained including 21 randomized, controlled trials and corresponding to 36 831 patients. We found that in SLE, inflammatory activity/type 1 symptoms were mostly uncorrelated with type 2 symptoms and/or HRQoL. Several studies even showing an inverse relationship. No or weak correlation was observed in 85, 3% (92, 6%), 76, 7% (74, 4%) and 37, 5% (73, 1%) of studies (patients) for fatigue, anxiety-depression, and pain, respectively. For HRQoL, no or weak correlation was observed in 77, 5% of studies (88% of patients). Conclusion Type 2 symptoms are poorly correlated with inflammatory activity/type 1 symptoms in SLE. Possible explanations and implications for clinical care and therapeutic evaluation are discussed.
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