Nana Xia, Soon-Min Hong, Xueliang Zhang, Chenyi Shao, Ninghui Yan, Huihua Ding, Qiang Guo
Clinical and experimental rheumatology 2024 FebThis study investigated the efficacy and safety of abatacept (ABA) in interstitial lung disease (ILD) associated with antisynthetase syndrome (ASS). Eight patients were identified through retrospective analysis of the medical records of our centre. All patients fulfilled the Solomon criteria and had a disease complicated with ILD. Lung function, imaging, serum markers, clinical evaluation indicators of ILD, peripheral blood cell classification, cytokines, and prednisone doses were analysed. Seven of the eight patients were female. The mean age was 54.4 (standard deviation [SD] 6.0) years. Antibodies against Jo-1, PL-12, and PL-7 were present in three, three, and two patients respectively. At baseline, the mean diffusing lung capacity for carbon monoxide (DLCO) was 53.8% (SD 9.2%), the mean score of King's Brief Interstitial Lung Disease (KBILD) was 40.6 (SD 13.8), the median Krebs Von den Lungen-6 (KL-6) was 1612.5 (interquartile range [IQR] 1180.5-2431.5) U/ml. All patients experienced symptom alleviation after ABA therapy. The mean and median changes in DLCO percentage, KBILD, and KL-6 were 12.3% (p<0.05), 21.4 (p<0.01), and 174.5U/ml (p<0.01), respectively. No obvious adverse events related to ABA were observed during the treatment. Our study offers preliminary, but encouraging, clinical evidence in favour of ABA as a therapy for ASS-ILD. ABA demonstrated favourable effects on ILD and was well-tolerated. Well-designed randomised controlled studies are required to confirm the efficacy and safety of this strategy.
Nana Xia, Soon-Min Hong, Xueliang Zhang, Chenyi Shao, Ninghui Yan, Huihua Ding, Qiang Guo. Efficacy and safety of abatacept for interstitial lung disease associated with antisynthetase syndrome: a case series. Clinical and experimental rheumatology. 2024 Feb;42(2):377-385
PMID: 38079347
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