Integrative Analysis Reveals a Molecular Stratification of Systemic Autoimmune Diseases
2020; Wiley; Volume: 73; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1002/art.41610
ISSN2326-5205
AutoresGuillermo Barturen, Sepideh Babaei, Francesc Català‐Moll, Manuel Martínez‐Bueno, Zuzanna Makowska, Jordi Martorell‐Marugán, Pedro Carmona‐Sáez, Daniel Toro‐Domínguez, Elena Carnero‐Montoro, María Teruel, Martin Kerick, Marialbert Acosta‐Herrera, Lucas Le Lann, Christophe Jamin, Javier Rodríguez‐Ubreva, Antonio García-Gómez, Jorge Kageyama, Anne Buttgereit, Sikander Hayat, Joerg Mueller, Ralf Lesche, María P. Hernández-Fuentes, María Jazmín Abraham‐Juárez, Tania F. Rowley, Ian N.H. White, Concepción Marañón, Tania Anjos, Nieves Varela, Rocío Aguilar‐Quesada, Francisco Javier Garrancho, Antonio López‐Berrio, Manuel Rodríguez Maresca, Héctor Navarro‐Linares, Isabel Almeida, Nancy Azevedo, Mariana Brandão, Ana Campar, Raquel Faria, Fátima Farinha, António Marinho, Esmeralda Neves, Ana Tavares, Carlos Vasconcelos, Elena Trombetta, Gaia Montanelli, Barbara Vigone, Damiana Álvarez‐Errico, Tianlu Li, Divya Thiagaran, Ricardo Blanco, Alfonso Corrales Martínez, Fernanda Genre, Raquel López Mejías, Miguel Á. González‐Gay, Sara Remuzgo, Begoña Ubilla Garcia, Ricard Cervera, Gerard Espinosa, Ignasi Rodríguez‐Pintó, Ellen De Langhe, Jonathan Cremer, Rik Lories, Doreen Belz, Nicolas Hunzelmann, Niklas Baerlecken, Katja Kniesch, Torsten Witte, Michaela Lehner, Georg Stummvoll, Michael Zauner, M. Á. Aguirre, Nuria Barbarroja, Carmen Castro, Eduardo Collantes‐Estévez, Enrique de Ramón, Isabel Díaz Quintero, Alejandro Escudero‐Contreras, María Concepción Fernández Roldán, Yolanda Jiménez, Inmaculada Jiménez Moleón, C. Lόpez-Pedrera, R. Ortega Castro, N. Ortego, Enrique Raya, Carolina Artusi, Maria Gerosa, Pier Luigi Meroni, Tommaso Schioppo, Aurélie De Groof, Julie Ducreux, Bernard Lauwerys, Anne‐Lise Maudoux, Divi Cornec, Valérie Devauchelle‐Pensec, Sandrine Jousse‐Joulin, P Jouve, Bénédicte Rouvière, Alain Saraux, Quentin Simon, Montserrat Alvarez, Carlo Chizzolini, Aleksandra Maria Dufour, Donatienne Wynar, Attila Balog, Márta Bocskai, Magdolna Deák, Sonja Dulic, Gabriella Kádár, László Kovács, Qingyu Cheng, Velia Gerl, Falk Hiepe, Laleh Khodadadi, Silvia Thiel, Emanuele de Rinaldis, Sambasiva Rao, Robert J. Benschop, Chris Chamberlain, Ernst R. Dow, Yiannis Ioannou, Laurence Laigle, Jacqueline Marovac, Jérôme Wojcik, Yves Renaudineau, María Orietta Borghi, Johan Frostegård, Javier Martı́n, Lorenzo Beretta, Esteban Ballestar, Fiona McDonald, Jacques‐Olivier Pers, Marta E. Alarcón‐Riquelme,
Tópico(s)Atherosclerosis and Cardiovascular Diseases
ResumoClinical heterogeneity, a hallmark of systemic autoimmune diseases, impedes early diagnosis and effective treatment, issues that may be addressed if patients could be classified into groups defined by molecular pattern. This study was undertaken to identify molecular clusters for reclassifying systemic autoimmune diseases independently of clinical diagnosis.Unsupervised clustering of integrated whole blood transcriptome and methylome cross-sectional data on 955 patients with 7 systemic autoimmune diseases and 267 healthy controls was undertaken. In addition, an inception cohort was prospectively followed up for 6 or 14 months to validate the results and analyze whether or not cluster assignment changed over time.Four clusters were identified and validated. Three were pathologic, representing "inflammatory," "lymphoid," and "interferon" patterns. Each included all diagnoses and was defined by genetic, clinical, serologic, and cellular features. A fourth cluster with no specific molecular pattern was associated with low disease activity and included healthy controls. A longitudinal and independent inception cohort showed a relapse-remission pattern, where patients remained in their pathologic cluster, moving only to the healthy one, thus showing that the molecular clusters remained stable over time and that single pathogenic molecular signatures characterized each individual patient.Patients with systemic autoimmune diseases can be jointly stratified into 3 stable disease clusters with specific molecular patterns differentiating different molecular disease mechanisms. These results have important implications for future clinical trials and the study of nonresponse to therapy, marking a paradigm shift in our view of systemic autoimmune diseases.
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