SIGLEC1 (CD169) is a sensitive biomarker for the deterioration of the clinical course in childhood systemic lupus erythematosus

Author:

Stuckrad Sae Lim von1ORCID,Klotsche Jens2,Biesen Robert3ORCID,Lieber Mareike1,Thumfart Julia4,Meisel Christian5,Unterwalder Nadine5,Kallinich Tilmann126

Affiliation:

1. Pediatric Pneumology, Immunology and Critical Care Medicine and SPZ (Center for Chronically Sick Children), Charité University Medicine Berlin, Berlin, Germany

2. Deutsches Rheuma-Forschungszentrum Berlin, a Leibniz Institute (DRFZ), Berlin, Germany

3. Department of Rheumatology, Charité University Medicine Berlin, Berlin, Germany

4. Pediatric Gastroenterology, Nephrology and Metabolic Diseases, Charité University Medicine Berlin, Berlin, Germany

5. Immunology Department, LaborBerlin – Charité Vivantes GmbH, Berlin, Germany

6. Berlin Institute of Health, Berlin, Germany

Abstract

Background To analyse the validity of membrane-bound SIGLEC1 (CD169) as a sensitive biomarker for monitoring disease activity in pediatric systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Methods 27 children and adolescents with SLE were followed for a mean of 13.5 months. During consecutive routine visits SLEDAI-2k, C3, C4 and ds-DNA values were determined. Additionally, expression of SIGLEC1 on monocytes was determined by flow cytometry. The amount of PE-labelled CD169 mAb bound per monocyte was analyzed using QuantiBRITE™ PE tubes. Associations between biomarkers and the clinical course were investigated by regression analysis. Results In general, SIGLEC1 expression is high on SLE-derived monocytes (mean 6 359 (SD 6 056) molecules/monocyte, cut-off 2 500 molecules/monocyte), all patients with newly diagnosed SLE exhibit elevated expression (mean 13366 (SD 7 750) molecules/monocyte). Changes (Δ) in SIGLEC1 levels during the clinical course is the only biomarker that significantly correlates with the change in SLEDAI-2k (betaST = 0.28, p = 0.001). At follow-up visit, a clinically important worsening was experienced by 47.6% of patients with a Δ SIGLEC1 > 2 151 molecules/cell (OR 5.31) and 72.4% with a Δ SIGLEC1 > 756 molecules/cell (OR 8.90). Conversely, 36.4% of patients with a Δ SIGLEC1 < -2 818 molecules/cell (OR 4.16, percentiles as cut-off criteria) and 50.0% of patients with a Δ SIGLEC1 < -1 370 molecules/cell (OR 3.55, application of Youden index) showed clinical improvement. SIGLEC1 expression correlates inversely with the amount of therapeutically applied hydroxychloroquine (p < 0.001). Conclusions SIGLEC1 expression on monocytes is a sensitive biomarker for adjusting disease activity in childhood SLE and represents a promising and easily applicable tool for disease monitoring.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Rheumatology

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