Evaluation of ocular surface inflammation and systemic conditions in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus: a cross-sectional study

系统性红斑狼疮患者眼表炎症及全身状况的评估:一项横断面研究

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作者:Yuerong Ren, Jing Tian, Wen Shi, Jianing Feng, Yingyi Liu, Huanmin Kang, Yan He

Conclusion

Dry eye and tear cytokines and chemokines-mediated ocular surface inflammation persist in SLE patients and are associated with systemic conditions. Therefore, it is necessary for patients with SLE to combine systemic and ocular assessments.

Methods

The study enrolled 30 SLE patients and 30 controls. Ocular symptoms were evaluated using the Ocular Surface Disease Index (OSDI) questionnaire. Tear samples from all participants were collected for tear multi-cytokine and chemokine concentration analysis. All participants were assessed for dry eye disease (DED), including Schirmer I test, tear break-up time (TBUT), corneal fluorescein staining (CFS), meibomian gland secretion (MGS), lid-parallel conjunctival folds (LIPCOF), corneal clarity, and symblepharon. Besides, all participants were also examined for conjunctival impression cytology to measure the density of conjunctival goblet cells (CGCs). The peripheral blood indicators from SLE patients were also collected to measure the SLE-associated autoantibody specificities and systemic inflammatory indicators. Pearson and Spearman's analysis were uesd to examine the correlation between tear cytokines, CGCs, DED-related indicators, and systemic conditions.

Objective

The cross-sectional study was designed to evaluate the association of ocular surface inflammation with systemic conditions in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE).

Results

The two groups were matched for age and gender in this study. 36.67% of eyes (11 in 30) of SLE patients and 13.33% of eyes (4 in 30) of controls were diagnosed with DED. OSDI scores, abnormal TBUT percentages, CFS percentages, and DED grading were all higher in SLE patients than in control group, while density of CGCs was lower. There were no significant differences in Schirmer I test, MGS, LIPCOF, corneal clarity, and symblepharon between SLE patients and controls. The levels of tear chemokine (C-X-C motif) ligand 11 (CXCL11) and cytokine interleukin-7 (IL-7) in patients with SLE were significantly higher than those in control group. Moreover, among SLE patients, the severity of DED and the level of tear chemokine CXCL11 were significantly positively correlated with SLE-associated autoantibody specificities.

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