Racial variability in immune responses only partially explains differential systemic sclerosis disease severity

Author:

Kuchinad Kamini EORCID,Kim Ji Soo,Woods Adrianne,Leatherman Gwen,Gutierrez-Alamillo Laura,Mayes Maureen D,Domsic RobynORCID,Ramos Paula SORCID,Silver Richard MORCID,Varga John,Saketkoo Lesley Ann,Kafaja Suzanne,Shanmugan Victoria K,Gordon Jessica,Chung Lorinda,Bernstein Elana JORCID,Gourh Pravitt,Boin Francesco,Kastner Daniel LORCID,Zeger Scott L,Casciola-Rosen LiviaORCID,Wigley Fredrick M,Shah Ami AORCID

Abstract

ObjectiveTo understand if autoantibodies account for racial variation in disease severity, we compared autoantibody distribution and associated phenotype between self-identified black and white systemic sclerosis (SSc) patients.Methods803 black and 2178 white SSc patients had systematic testing for autoantibodies using Euroimmun (centromere (ACA), RNA-polymerase III (POLR3), Scl70, PM/Scl, NOR90, Th/To, Ku, U3RNP and Ro52) and commercial ELISA (U1RNP). In this observational study, logistic regression was performed to assess the association between self-identified race and outcomes, adjusting for autoantibodies. To estimate whether the effect of race was mediated by autoantibody status, race coefficients from multivariate models including and excluding autoantibodies were compared.ResultsAnti-Scl70, anti-U1RNP, anti-U3RNP, anti-Th/To, anti-Ku and anti-NOR90 were more common in the black cohort than in the white cohort, which was enriched for ACA, anti-POLR3 and anti-PM/Scl. Black individuals had a higher prevalence of severe Raynaud’s, skin, lung, gastrointestinal and renal disease whereas white individuals had a higher prevalence of severe heart and muscle disease. Adjusting for autoantibodies decreased the effect of race on outcome for telangiectasias, forced vital capacity <70%, pulmonary hypertension and severe lung, heart, muscle and gastrointestinal disease by 11%–44% and increased the association between race and renal crisis and severe kidney disease by 37%–52%.ConclusionsThis study is the largest systematic analysis of autoantibody responses in a geographically diverse population of black SSc patients. Black and white individuals with SSc have distinct autoantibody profiles. Autoantibodies explain only a fraction of the effect of race on clinical outcomes, suggesting other factors contribute to disparate outcomes between these groups.

Funder

Sara and Alex Othon Fund

NIH/NIAMS

Jerome L. Greene Foundation

Johns Hopkins inHealth initiative

Martha McCrory Professorship

Scleroderma Research Foundation

NIH/NHLBI

Donald B. and Dorothy L. Stabler Foundation

Chresanthe Staurulakis Memorial Discovery Fund

Department of Defense

Bechtle Precision Medicine Fund in Scleroderma

Publisher

BMJ

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