Systemic sclerosis Flashcards

1
Q

What is systemic sclerosis?

A

Autoimmune disorder of connective tissue

Results in fibrosis affecting skin, internal organs and vasculature

Characteristics: Raynaud’s, digital ischaemia, sclerodactyly, cardiac, lung, gut, renal disease

Mainly 40-50 yrs old

F>M; 4:1

Subdivided: diffuse cutaneous sclerosis (30%) and limited cutaneous (70%)

Diffuse cutaneous: poor prognosis (5 year survival rate – 70%)

Poor prognosis: older age, diffuse skin disease, proteinuria, high ESR, low gas transfer factor for carbon monoxide (TLCO), pulmonary hypertension

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2
Q

SS - pathophysiology

A

Cause not completely understood

Genetic component
- Associations with alleles at HLA locus

Immunologic dysfunction

  • T lymphocytes (Th17 subtype) infiltrate skin
  • Abnormal fibroblast activation -> increased production of ECM in dermis, primarily type I collagen
  • Symmetrical thickening, tightening and induration of skin (Scleroderma)

Arterial and arteriolar narrowing occurs due to intimal proliferation and vessel wall inflammation

Endothelial injury → release of vasoconstrictors and platelet activation → further ischaemia (exacerbates fibrotic process)

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3
Q

SS - clinical features

A

Skin

  • Initially, non-pitting oedema of fingers and flexor tendon sheaths
  • Skin becomes shiny and taut, distal skin creases disappear
  • Can have capillary loss
  • Face + neck – thinning of lips and radial furrowing
  • Skin involvement restricted to sites distal to elbow/knee (apart from face) = limited cutaneous sclerosis
  • Involvement proximal to the knee and elbow and on trunk = diffuse disease

Raynaud’s

  • May precede other features by many years
  • Small blood vessel involvement in extremities → critical tissue ischaemia → localised distal skin infarction & necrosis

Musculoskeletal features

  • Arthralgia & flexor tenosynovitis
  • Restricted hand function – is due to skin rather than joint disease
  • Muscle weaknes/wasting may result from myositis

GI

  • Smooth muscle atrophy and fibrosis in lower 2/3 of oesophagus lead to reflux with erosive oesophagitis
  • Dysphagia and odynophagia may also occur
  • Involvement of stomach – early satiety, occasionally outlet obstruction
  • Small intestine involvement – may lead to malabsorption due to bacterial overgrowth, intermittent bloating, pain or constipation

Pulmonary

  • Pulmonary hypertension complicates long-standing disease (more common in limited cutaneous
  • Presents with insidiously evolving exertional dyspnoea & signs of right heart failure
  • Interstitial lung disease common in patients with diffuse disease, who have topoisomerase 1 antibodies

Renal

  • One of the main causes of death = hypertensive renal crisis
  • Rapidly developing accelerated phase hypertension and renal failure
  • More likely to occur in diffuse disease
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4
Q

SS - history

A

CREST

Calcinosis → “Have you noticed any skin changes?”

Raynaud’s → “Do you notice that your fingertips change colour, particularly in the cold or during stress?”

Eospheageal dysmotility → “Do you ever find it difficult to swallow?”

Sclerodactyly → “Have you noticed any thickening/tightening of the skin on your fingers?”

Telangiectasia → “Have you noticed small spider-like red lines on your face or anywhere else on your body?”

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5
Q

SS - examinations

A

Hand - tight, shiny skin, sclerodactyly, flexion contractors of the fingers

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6
Q

SS - investigations

A

Routine haematology, renal, liver and bone function tests and urinalysis

ANA +ve – 70%

30% with diffuse disease – have antibodies to topoisomerase 1
60% with limited cutaneous – anticentromere antibodies

CXR, transthoracic echocardiography and lung function to asses for ILD and pulmonary hypertension (low corrected transfer factor may indicate early pulmonary hypertension)

High-resolution lung CT – if suspect ILD

Suspect pulmonary hypertension – right heart catheter measurements

Barium swallow – assess oesophageal involvement

Hydrogen breathe test – indicate bacterial overgrowth

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7
Q

SS - management

A

No treatments available to halt/reverse fibrotic changes that underlie disease
Focus of management: slow effects of disease on target organs

Raynauds / digital ulcers

  • Avoid cold exposure, thermal insulating gloves/socks, maintenance of high core temp.
  • If bad consider - Ca channel blockers, losartan, fluoxetine, sildenafil
  • IV prostacyclin for severe disease and critical ischaemia (6-8 hours daily for 5 days)
  • Bosentan (endothelin-1 antagonist) treat ischaemic digital ulcers
  • Digital tip tissue health can be maintained with regular use of fucidin-hydrocortisone cream

GI

  • Oesophageal reflux – PPI and anti-reflux agents
  • Rotating courses of antibiotics may be required for bacterial overgrowth (rifaximin, a tetracyclin, metronidazole)
  • Dysmotility/pseudo-obstruction – metoclopramide or domperidone

Hypertension
- Aggressive treatment with ACEi, even if renal impairment present

Joint

  • Analgesics and/or NSAID
  • If synovitis is present & both RA and OA have been ruled out, low dose methotrexate can be of value

Progressive pulmonary hypertension

  • Early treatment with bosentan is required
  • Severe/progressive disease – heart-lung transplant may be considered

ILD
- Glucocorticoids and (pulse intravenous) cyclophosphamide are the mainstays of treatment in patients who have progressive ILD

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