Title: Clinical Overview of Lupus/CTD (Connective Tissue Diseases)
1Clinical Overview of Lupus/CTD(Connective Tissue
Diseases)
- Rich Callahan MSPA, PA-C
- Fletcher Allen Health Care
- Dept. of Dermatology
- Burlington, VT
2CTD formerly known as CVD
- Formerly known as collagen vascular diseases,
now used interchangeably with CTD. - The term vascular was included because it was
recognized early on that the vascular system has
a higher sensitivity to the autoimmune process
that drives these diseases. - Vasculitis, or inflammation of the blood vessels,
plays a role in many of the CTDs. This is why
dilated periungual capillary loops are commonly
visible in patients with Lupus, Scleroderma and
dermatomyositis.
3What are connective tissue diseases? (CTD)
- A group of diseases of unknown etiology affecting
multiple systems within the body. - All share a common characteristic The presence
of antibodies in the serum of ill patients. - These autoantibodies are more than likely
responsible for the diseases, although they can
be elusive at times, making CTD a clinical,
rather than laboratory diagnosis.
4Diagnosis of CTD is tricky
- Almost always difficult to diagnose because CTD
has no specific onset, duration or set of
clinical characteristics. - There are no gold standard tests for the
diagnosis of CTD. - For this reason, diagnosis is based on sets of
clinical criteria, rather than any one diagnostic
procedure.
5CTDs Some Examples
- Lupus Erythematosus
- Dermatomyositis
- Scleroderma
- Relapsing Polychondritis
- Reiters Disease
- Ankylosing Spondylitis
- Polyarteritis nodosa
- Kawasakis disease
- Psoriatic arthropathy
- Polymyositis
- Polymyalgia rheumatica
- Temporal arteritis
- Sjogrens Disease
6We will focus on the big three which will most
likely be seen in clinical practice Lupus,
Dermatomyositis and Scleroderma.
7Of the Big 3, we will focus on Lupus as it has
the most dermatologic manifestations.
- What is Lupus?
- An autoimmune disease of unknown origin in which
autoantibodies attract to specific types of
connective tissue and cause damage resulting in
clinical signs, symptoms and abnormalities. - Its important in dermatology because 85 of all
Lupus cases have skin involvement. - Its not rare, and its not common either
- About 40 cases/100,000 in North America
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9Why is diagnosing Lupus important?
- Because a subtype of Lupus known as SLE (systemic
lupus erythematosus) can have serious multisystem
involvement resulting in significant
morbidity/mortality if not recognized/treated. - Affects multiple systems within the body
including immune, hematologic, neurologic, renal,
cardiovascular, rhematologic and dermatologic. - Patients who present with skin lesions
suggestive/diagnostic for Lupus need a full
work-up to exclude SLE.
10Lupus Subtypes
- SLE Systemic Lupus Erythematosus - Presents with
a wide range of skin lesions and always has some
level of multisystem involvement. - CCLE Chronic Cutaneous LE (or discoid lupus) -
Defined by its characteristic discoid skin
lesion. Has the least potential for systemic
involvement. - SCLE Subacute Cutaneous LE Also has wide
range of skin lesions. Often some systemic
involvement, but usually has a benign course. - (These are the 3 common subtypes the two
others, Neonatal LE and drug-induced LE are
quite rare.)
11Clinical Presentation - SLE
- Rash occurs in 85 of patients with SLE
Erythematous patches and plaques primarily on sun
exposed surfaces of head, trunk and upper
extremities - Face
- Upper chest
- Shoulders/extensor arms
- Dorsal hands/fingers (spares the knuckles)
- Lesions may/may not be scaly and never itch.
- Butterfly rash occurs in 30-60 of patients with
SLE - Photosensitivity in 50 of patients. Tends to be
femalesgtmales, age usually 30-40 years. More
common in African-Americans
12Butterfly Rash
- Also known as bi-malar rash. Often a
butterfly-shaped, erythematous patch covering
malar (cheek) and nasal areas. Spares nasolabial
folds. - Often triggered by recent sun exposure.
- Presents in many different ways
- Scale/No scale
- Vesicular
- Atrophy/No atrophy
- Just erythema w/o textural changes.
13Additional skin lesions/signs of SLE
- Arthritis
- Nephropathy
- Fever
- Neurologic involvement
- Raynauds
- Serositis
- Thrombocytopenia
- Oral Ulcers (shallow erosions on buccal mucosa,
hard palate, lips)
- Thrombosis
- Discoid/SCLE lesions (more on this later)
- Myositis
- Hemolytic anemia
14Diagnosis of SLE
- Heres where it gets tricky no one diagnostic
criteria or clinical characteristic will define
the disease. - Its more of a clinical big picture diagnosis,
where a group of clinical signs/symptoms/diagnosti
c test results meet the criteria for SLE. - Lets not forget, these patients are usually
sick. They will complain of many other symptoms
in addition to skin lesions Joint pain, fever,
lymphadenopathy, psychosis, bruising, etc.)
15American College of Rheumatology 1997 Revised
Criteria for Classification of SLE. (Presence of
4 or more compatible with SLE)
- Butterfly Rash
- Discoid Rash
- Photosensitivity
- Oral ulcers
- Arthritis
- Serositis (Pleuritis or pericarditis)
- Renal disorder (Proteinuria or cellular casts.)
- Neurologic disorder (seizures/psychosis)
- Hematologic disorder (deficiencies of all cell
types) - Immunologic disorder (presence of autoantibodies
in serum) - Positive ANA
16Anti-Nuclear Antibody (ANA) is important
diagnostic test for Lupus and CTDs
- The only serum antibody test we will discuss in
detail as it is common to all CTD and is the
first test ordered when you suspect it. - It is sensitive for CTD, but not specific 95
of patients with CTD will have a positive ANA,
but there are many other diseases which will have
it as well. - It is worth noting that approximately 5 of
otherwise normal blood donors will have positive
ANA.
17Role of ANA titer in diagnosis of Lupus
- Other causes of positive ANA include neoplasms,
liver disease, active chronic infections and use
of birth control pills. - A positive ANA alone will not diagnose Lupus, but
will be strongly suggestive of the diagnosis if
other criteria exist. - A negative ANA strongly suggests against the
diagnosis of Lupus, but does not rule it out if
several other signs/symptoms of Lupus are present
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19ANA
- A test that detects presence of antinuclear
antibodies (ANAs) in human serum. ANAs are
antibodies that target human DNA as antigen. - It is a direct immunoflorescence (DIF) test in
which patients serum is placed on a substrate of
cultured human cells. - If ANAs are present, they attach to nuclear
components in the cells. - Fluorescein-stained anti-human immunoglobulins
are then applied which attach to the ANAs.
20ANA
- The prepared specimen is then viewed under
fluorescent microscopy, and different patterns of
fluorescence will emerge Homogenous, speckled,
peripheral and nucleolar. - Sometimes the pattern seen will help suggest
towards a certain diagnosis, sometimes not. - The important lesson to learn is that a positive
ANA accompanied by other signs of Lupus is
strongly suggestive of the diagnosis needs
further work-up to assess for presence of
internal disease. - The PCP at this stage would refer to rheumatology
or dermatology for further evaluation if possible.
21It Gets a lot more complicated!Further Lupus
Evaluation
- Skin biopsy (shavegtpunch) of lesional skin for
histopathology and perilesional skin for DIF
(need to have special DIF bottle on hand.) - Complete review of systems
- Additional antibody testing nDNA, Ro, La, Sm,
nRNP - Urinalysis
- CBC, ESR, C3, C4
- Unless your supervising doc really knows Lupus,
best to have rheumatology or dermatology pursue
additional work-up.
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24Clinical Example
- Nicole was a 28 y/o Caucasian female patient
currently under treatment for acne when she
developed an asymptomatic photosensitive
eruption on bilateral forearms. - Although described as initially being pink and
somewhat scaly by the patient, by the time I saw
it a week later in had changed to a faint rash of
small, slightly scaly purple papules. - At the same time she described a recent bout of
fatigue, fevers, headaches and loss of appetite.
25It is worth noting at this point that she had an
unexplained esophageal stricture about 6 months
prior
- I was treating her for acne at the time. ENT
treated her with prednisone, which seemed to
help, and eventually performed a procedure to
relieve her esophageal stricture. - Her symptoms stopped after the procedure.
- Because her condition improved, ENT did not look
any further, and called the esophageal stricture
idiopathic. - At the time of first presentation, I didnt link
this episode to her skin rash.
26First presentation of rash a diagnostic
procedure was performed
- A 4mm punch biopsy was done centered on one of
the papules on her forearm, and sent for routine
histopathology. - Specimen was read as prurigo nodularis, an
eczematous condition of thickened, lichenified
skin from chronic rubbing and scratching. - This biopsy resulted suggested against a
diagnosis of LE
27What made everything more interesting was that
she was convinced the whole time that she had
Lupus
- Claimed to have a strong family history of Lupus,
and said this was exactly what happened to her
aunt who had it. - (Text books cite an incidence of positive family
history in about 5 of cases.) - Continued to complain of fevers, fatigue and
loss of appetite. No objective signs of fever in
our office. - I had a negative biopsy, but we ordered a battery
of tests anyway including a slew of antibodies,
urinalysis, CBC, ESR, etc.
28Clinical Example cont
- Everything came back negative except for the ANA,
which was quite elevated at a titer of 1160,
with speckled and peripheral patterns. She was
on BCPs at the time, which can falsely elevate
ANA, but not usually this high. - She came back a week later with a new
photosensitive rash on her upper chest. It was
blotchy, pink, poorly-defined and faint. It was
not in the slightest bit scaly, and wasnt too
impressive to look at. - She seemed more anxious and now had bilateral
cervical lymphadenopathy and well as sweats and
continuing fatigue.
29Rheumatology to the rescue
- Although we still couldnt prove a diagnosis or
the presence of internal involvement related to
Lupus, it was still strongly suspected. - In addition, the patient seemed sick and was
convinced she had Lupus. - She was referred to rheumatology, who promptly
diagnosed her with Lupus on clinical grounds and
initiated treatment with Plaquenil. - I called the patient a week later, who seemed to
be feeling much better after a week of treatment.
30Plaquenil Deficiency
- An old joke in dermatology circles.
- Reserved for a small, but real group of patients
in whom LE is suspected, but cant be proven
definitively with diagnostic testing. - When you treat them empirically with an LE drug
(like plaquenil) and they get better on it, they
have been diagnosed with plaquenil deficiency!
31The Moral of the Story?
- SLE can be a tricky diagnosis at times, in that
it can be present despite multiple negative
diagnostic tests. - It is ultimately a clinical diagnosis, which
means that a practitioner who hasnt seen it much
before could be in for a hard time. - If the suspicion for SLE is there, but you cant
prove it, refer to someone who has more
experience with it. - Always listen to the patient, because sometimes
they will tell you whats wrong with them. - When in doubt, refer to rheumatology. Better to
let them rule out LE than miss a patient who
could progress to systemic involvement.
32Treatment of SLE
- Oral Steroids - prednisone, prednisolone, etc.
These drugs are effective anti-inflammatory
treatment for various forms of internal organ
involvement. - Antimalarials hydroxychloroquine (Plaquenil)
Effective treatment for all skin lesions of LE.
Generally safe for long-term treatment. - Dapsone a seldom-used antibiotic which shows
some efficacy in treating skin lesions of LE.
33CCLE Clinical Presentation(Chronic Cutaneous
LE, sometime referred to as Discoid LE or DLE)
- Classic lesion is discoid, or circular in
shape. Usually presents as asymmetrically
scattered, raised, violaceous-to-red flat-topped
plaques of 1-3cm diameter. Firmly adherent scale
which has a carpet tack texture on its
underside. (Because scaling penetrates the hair
follicles.) - Usually appear on face, scalp and neck
- FemalesgtMales.
- Incidence peak around age 40
- UV exposure and physical trauma can induce or
worsen lesions.
34CCLE Lesions
- Epidermal/dermal atrophy over time leads to
smooth, whitish plaques, which are essentially
hypopigmented. - This hypopigmentation is permanent and present a
greater problem for darker-skinned patients. - Chronic lesions in the scalp can be scarring,
which obliterates follicular structures and
ultimately results in permanent alopecia. - Lesions can last from months to years.
35Clinical Presentation of SCLE(Subacute Cutaneous
LE)
- Lesions present in 2 distinct morphologic
groupings - Papulosquamous pattern SCLE Faded to brightly
erythematous scaling papules and large plaques. - Annular-polycyclic pattern SCLE Eruption of
annular plaques, brightly erythematous with
clearly-defined, raised scaly border. Lesions
often have central clearing. - In both cases, lesions spare lateral trunk,
axillae, inner arms and knuckles. - Lesions resolve with hypopigmentation and
telangiectasia formation.
36Other symptoms of SCLE
- Arthritis
- Arthralgias
- Renal disease
- Serositis
- CNS symptoms
- Never as severe as in SLE
- Photosensitivity
- Periungual telangiectasias
- Vasculitis
37Diagnosis of CCLE/SCLE
- As any patient with LE can progress to SLE, a
full work-up is mandatory at baseline, even in
patients who only present with skin lesions - H P
- Lesional biopsy for histopathology. Perilesional
biopsy for DIF.
- CBC, ESR, platelets
- ANA
- Other antibodies nDNA, anti-RNP, Ro, La, Sm
- Urinalysis
- BUN/Creatinine
38Treatment of CCLE/SCLE
- First line of defense is photoprotection, as
Lupus is by nature a photosensitive disease. - Avoid direct sun exposure between 10am-3pm.
- Use broad-spectrum sunscreens (SPF 30 or higher
zinc oxide or titanium dioxide.) - Sun-protective hats and clothing will help.
39Treatment of CCLE/SCLE
- Topical Steroids (Classes I-V)
- Intralesional steroids - mostly triamcinolone
acetonide (Kenalog) - Oral antimalarials hydroxycholoquine
(Plaquenil) - Dapsone
- Others that have been tried with varying degrees
of success include Azathioprine (Imuran,)
methotrexate, thalidomide, acitretin and
isotretinoin.
40Treatment of CCLE/SCLE
- Primarily cutaneous, sub-acute LE can progress to
SLE with multisystem involvement without warning,
at any time. - CCLE/SCLE patients need to be followed
periodically with laboratory testing/office
visits to monitor for this potential development
of SLE.
41Dermatomyositis (DM)
- An autoimmune inflammatory disease of the muscles
often diagnosed by characteristic skin findings.
When skin findings absent, is called
polymyositis. - Can occur in children, but more often in adults
over 40. Often associated with underlying
malignancy in adults. - Proximal muscle weakness is most common
presenting symptom. - Male female. All age groups. Approximately
5-10 cases/million adults.
42Clinical Presentation of DM Has 6 Classic
Characteristics
- Heliotrope rash violaceous hue that surrounds
eyes, accompanied by periorbital and facial
edema. Can also affect face, shoulders, chest.
Can look/feel like a sunburn. - Gottrons papules eruption of fixed, firm,
red-to-violaceous flat-topped papules on
backs/sides of fingers, may or may not spare
knuckles.
43Clinical Presentation of DM
- Violaceous Scaling Patches Erythema with a
purple hue distributed symmetrically in patches
over knees, elbows and backs of hands. Unlike
the hand rash of SLE, the knuckles are not
spared. - Periungual telangiectasias proximal nails folds
are thickened, rough and erythematous. Numerous
superficial telangiectasias are visible with
opthalmoscope on red 3 or with a dermatoscope.
44Clinical Presentation of DM
- Symmetrical proximal muscle weakness - Usually
precedes dermatologic manifestations of DM so
need to assess by Get-up-and-go-test. - If you havent heard of it, you will during your
geriatric practicum in the winter. - Test administered to older patients to assess
muscle strength Patient is seated upright in a
chair with armrests and asked to push off the
armrests and lift themselves into a standing
position. - The patient is timed and assessed for difficulty
in performing the task.
45Clinical Presentation of DM
- Get-up-and-go-test is a good assessment for
proximal muscle weakness, and must be given to
all patients presenting with skin findings
suggestive of dermatomyositis. - Weakness tends to symmetrically affect legsgtarms.
Slowly develops over weeks to months. - DTRs remain normal.
46Diagnosis of DM
- Skin biopsy for histopathology and DIF
- Biopsy of weak muscles
- Muscle enzymes CK, AST, ALT, LDH
- 24 hour urine for creatinine an even more
sensitive measure of muscle damage.
- ANA
- Serum antibodies Ro, La, Sm, nRNP, Jo-1
- Significant association with occult malignancy in
adults presenting w/DM. - Do pelvic, breast exams and mammogram. CXR, DRE,
colonoscopy, PE
47Treatment of DM
- DM can occur in an acute setting, or be
chronic/recurrent over periods of years. Early
diagnosis and treatment greatly improves patient
outcomes. - Oral steroids first line treatment and often
used chronically over long periods of time in
tapering doses until remission or adequate
control. (usually prednisone.) Dose can be
adjusted based on improvement as indicated by
periodic checks of patients serum CK. - Methotrexate, azathioprine, cyclophosphamide
all potent immunosuppressants with many potential
side effects.
48Scleroderma(Sometimes referred to as Systemic
Sclerosis)
- A rare autoimmune disease which is highly
disfiguring and potentially fatal. - Affects women 3 x gt men
- Characterized by sclerotic, vascular and
inflammatory changes to various tissues including
skin and internal organs, often with multi-system
involvement. - Often affects lungs, heart and GI tract.
- Usual onset ages 30-50 years.
- Etiology is unknown.
49Scleroderma Clinical Presentation
- Presentation often preceded by history of
Raynauds phenomenon, migrating arthritis,
dysphagia and heartburn. Also GI symptoms such
as diarrhea and constipation. - Skin disease runs characteristic course of edema
to sclerosis to atrophy in affected areas of
skin. - Hands usually start with Raynauds (for months to
years) then progress to edema, then sclerosis
with ulcerations at fingertips and
sclerodactyly(hard fingers). Skin becomes tight
and leathery with obliteration of sweat glands
and hair. - Often seen in CREST presentation (more later)
50Scleroderma Clinical Presentation
- Unusual disease in that patients can look much
younger than actual age. - Facial skin becomes shiny and extremely taut.
Lips are thinned and nose starts to look like a
beak. Many prominent telangiectasias. - In other areas (trunk/proximal extremities) skin
becomes hardened and waxy, no longer able to
wrinkle or fold. - Calcinosis Cutis Hard, white nodules around
fingertips and knuckles as a result of cutaneous
calcification.
51Joe Monroe (SDPA founder) uses the word CREST as
a way to remember clinical criteria for
Scleroderma
- Calcinosis especially in fingers
- Raynauds present in gt90 of scleroderma cases
- Esophageal dysmotility leading to reflux
- Sclerodactyly hardening of skin, tapering of
distal digits - Telangiectasias on face, chest, mouth, even
internally.
52Scleroderma Clinical Presentation
- Signs of internal involvement can include
- GI Dysphagia, constipation, diarrhea, bloating,
malabsorption. - Respiratory Pulmonary fibrosis.
- Cardiac Conduction defects, HF, pericarditis.
- Renal Uremia, malignant hypertension. (Leading
cause of death.) - Musculoskeletal CTS, weakness.
53Diagnosis of Scleroderma
- Usually a straightforward clinical diagnosis with
characteristic findings. - Punch biopsy of lesional skin usually diagnostic.
- Do ROS with goal of finding internal involvement
if present. - PE of periungual regions with opthalmoscope on
red 3 or with dermatoscope (dermlite) - ANA
- Other antibodies Ro, La, Sm, nRNP, Scl-70
54Treatment of Scleroderma
- Treating scleroderma with internal involvement is
still difficult and only partially effective.
Numerous agents have been tried Penicillamine,
methotrexate, prednisone, relaxin, interferons
and cyclosporine. - Cutaneous disease is managed primarily by
watching for signs of secondary infection, which
can opportunize on compromised skin barrier
(usual culprit is staph.) - PT becomes important in advanced disease to
maintain ROM over joints.