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Clinical phenotypes of IgG4-related disease reflect different prognostic outcomes

Marco Lanzillotta, Corrado Campochiaro, Gaia Mancuso, Giuseppe A. Ramirez, Gabriele Capurso, Massimo Falconi, Lorenzo Dagna, Emanuel Della‐Torre

2020Lara D. Veeken93 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Four clinical phenotypes of IgG4-related disease (IgG4-RD) have been recently identified by latent class analysis (LCA): pancreato-biliary (group 1); retroperitoneum/aortitis (group 2); head and neck limited (group 3); and Mikulicz/systemic (group 4). The reproducibility of this classification in clinical practice and its relevance for patient management, however, remain unknown. METHODS: The study included 179 patients. Four IgG4-RD experts were asked to classify a validation cohort of 40 patients according to published LCA-derived phenotypes based on clinical judgement. Agreement between LCA and clinical clustering was calculated. To assess differences among disease phenotypes, the following variables were recorded on an additional 139 patients: serum IgG4 and IgE; inflammatory markers; eosinophils; plasmablasts; IgG4-RD responder index (RI); history of atopy, diabetes, osteoporosis, relapses and malignancy; cumulative dose of glucocorticoids; and use of rituximab. RESULTS: Clinical judgement replicated LCA classification with strong agreement among IgG4-RD experts (κ = 0.841, P < 0.0005). At disease onset, group 1 showed the highest levels of serum IgG4 and IgE. Groups 2 and 4 had the lowest and highest IgG4-RD RI, respectively. At 2 years' follow-up, group 3 received the highest cumulative dose of glucocorticoids, but higher incidences of diabetes mellitus were observed in groups 1 and 4, consistent with the higher likelihood of pancreatic involvement in groups 1 and 4. No difference among the four groups was observed in terms of disease recurrence, time to relapse and frequency of rituximab infusion. CONCLUSION: Clinical phenotypes of IgG4-RD reflect differences in epidemiological features and prognostic outcomes.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineInternal medicineIgG4-related diseaseRituximabCohortAutoimmune pancreatitisDiseaseAsthmaGastroenterologyMalignancyLymphomaIgG4-Related and Inflammatory DiseasesNeuroendocrine Tumor Research AdvancesGastrointestinal disorders and treatments
Clinical phenotypes of IgG4-related disease reflect different prognostic outcomes | Litcius