Rheumatoid Arthritis Epidemiology, Pathology, and Pathogenesis PDF

Summary

This document explores the epidemiology, pathology, and pathogenesis of rheumatoid arthritis. It examines the role of genetic factors like HLA-DR and environmental factors like smoking in the development of the disease. The document also discusses the impact of the disease on synovial tissue and the role of various cytokines in the inflammatory process.

Full Transcript

Rheumatoid Arthritis Epidemiology, Pathology, and Pathogenesis Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is one of the most common inflammatory arthritides. Affected patients suffer from chronic articular pain, disability, and excess mortality. It primarily affects the small diarthro...

Rheumatoid Arthritis Epidemiology, Pathology, and Pathogenesis Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is one of the most common inflammatory arthritides. Affected patients suffer from chronic articular pain, disability, and excess mortality. It primarily affects the small diarthrodial joints of the hands and feet, although larger weight-bearing and appendicular joints can also be involved. Extra-articular manifestations and systemic symptoms also occur, but in a minority of patients. RA is a heterogeneous disease variable severity and unpredictable response to therapy. Genetic and environmental factors are clearly implicated in its etiology and pathogenesis. Translational research efforts have led to novel targeted therapies, although the treatment of RA remains a significant unmet medical need. The Role of HLA-DR and the Shared Epitope Hypothesis The most potent genetic risk for RA is conveyed by certain major histocompatibility complex alleles (MHC ) or HLA for human leukocyte antigen Increased prevalence of RA was reported to be associated with a subset of DR4 alleles in most Western European populations or a subset of DR1 alleles in other populations such as Spanish, Basque, and Israeli cohorts. Current HLA typing can discriminate allelic variants at the nucleotide level and reveals that a conserved amino acid sequence is over- represented in patients with RA. Different models have been proposed to explain the role of the shared epitope in RA. Susceptibility alleles could bind efficiently to arthritogenic peptides, such as those either derived from a self-antigen or a microbial pathogen, lead to the positive or negative selection of autoimmune T cells in the thymus, lead to inadequate numbers of regulatory T cells, become the target of T cells themselves due to molecular mimicry between QKRAA and pathogens implicated in RA, such as Escherichia coli ,or Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) peptides. Nongenetic Risk Factors Influence of Sex Women are two to three times more likely to develop RA than men. Hormonal factors like estrogen and progesterone could potentially explain some of the gender effect. Estrogen might have detrimental effects through its ability to decrease apoptosis of B cells, potentially permitting the selection of auto reactive clones. Hormones also have a complex influence on the balance of T-cell subsets with distinct cytokine profiles. For instance, administration of estrogen in animal models can enhance or suppress T-helper (Th) 1-mediated immunity, The situation during pregnancy exemplifies complex influence that fi sex has on RA. Seventy-five percent of pregnant women with RA experience spontaneous remission, although the disease typically flares within weeks after delivery. Soluble mediators released by the placenta like transforming growth factor (TGF) beta, IL-10, or alpha-fetoprotein might contribute to this effect. Alternatively, the immune system in pregnant women displays a shift towards a Th2 bias, which could suppress the characteristic Th1 profile of RA. Tobacco Exposure to various environmental factors increase the risk for RA, and cigarette smoke is one of the best characterized. Of interest, smoking also enhances the risk of developing anti-CCP positive RA in patients with the SE The mechanism of anti-CCP antibody generation from inhaled smoke probably relates to inflammation and activation of innate immunity in the airway, which then induces peptide citrullination. substantially equivalent In a susceptible host, such as someone carrying the SE and with genetically determined immune hyperreactivity, these repeated insults followed by chronic exposure to citrullinated peptides could lead to the production of anti-CCP antibodies and other antibodies like rheumatoid factors. Anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide (CCP) This antibody is more speci c than rheumatoid factor (RF) for the diagnosis of RA Bacteria and Their Products: Infectious agents have long been considered prime candidates as initiating factors for RA, although the search for a specific etiologic agent has been unrewarding. Bacterial stimulate synovial innate immune responses. Even nonspecific bacterial products could thus play a role in synovitis by activating cytokine networks or acting enhancing adaptive autoimmune responses. Viruses : Several viruses have been implicated as possible etiologic factors in RA. A relationship between RA and EBV was suggested by several observations. Rheumatoid factors are proteins made by your immune system that can attack healthy tissue in the body SYNOVIAL PATHOLOGY The complex histological architecture of the synovial tissue in RA is the result of a dynamic process involving coordinated molecular signals (chemokines, adhesion molecules, cytokines, and growth factors) and cellular events (apoptosis, proliferation, cell migration, and survival). Increased numbers of both type A and B synoviocytes augment the depth of the lining layer, sometimes to 10 cell layers, and mononuclear cells infiltrate the sublining The lining is the primary source of inflammatory cytokines and proteases, thus participating in joint destruction in concert with activated chondrocytes and osteoclasts. Villous projections protrude into the joint cavity, invading the underlying cartilage and bone where the proliferating tissue is called pannus. In the synovial sublining region, edema, blood vessel proliferation, and increased cellularity lead to a marked increase in tissue volume. T and B lymphocytes, plasma cells, interdigitating and follicular dendritic cells (IDC and FDC), and natural killer cells (NK cells) accumulate in rheumatoid synovium and can be distributed diffusely throughout the sublining or organized into lymphoid aggregates. The dominant cells, CD4+ T cells, CD4+ T cells are especially enriched in aggregates, whereas CD8+ T cells are present in the periphery of the aggregates or scattered throughout the sublining B-Cell Autoimmunity and Autoantibodies Antibodies directed against joint-specific and systemic autoantigens are commonly detected in the blood of RA patients. Rheumatoid Factors IgG and IgM RFs are found in up to 90% of RA patients. Testing for IgM RF is about 70% sensitive and 80% specific for RA. However, these autoantibodies can also be produced during chronic infections, malignancy, and in a variety of inflammatory and autoimmune syndromes. RFs are also detectable in 1% to 4% of healthy individuals, and up to 25% of healthy individuals over the age of 60 years. They can be detected in the blood up to 10 years before the onset of RA, with an increasing incidence in the period immediately before clinical symptoms develop. Therefore, the mere presence of RF is not sufficient to cause arthritic symptoms. The presence of RF in RA, however, has prognostic significance. Sero positive patients have more aggressive disease while sero negative patients tend to experience less severe arthritis with fewer bone erosions. Anti-Cyclic Citrullinated Peptide Antibodies Anti-CCP testing has a sensitivity of up to 80% to 90% and a specificity of 90% for RA, which increases to >95% specificity if combined with the presence of IgM RF. Anti-CCP antibodies are occasionally produced in other inflammatory diseases, such as psoriatic arthritis, autoimmune hepatitis, and pulmonary tuberculosis (TB). Similar to RF, anti-CCP antibodies are a risk factor for more aggressive disease and are produced early in disease. T-Cell Autoimmunity Naive CD4+ T cells can be differentiated into multiple effector types, including Th1 and Th2 phenotypes. Experimental systems have shown that precursor cells can be polarized towards one of these phenotypes depending on the nature of the antigen, characteristics of the antigen-presenting cells, and the cytokine milieu. Th1 cells are involved in the defense against intracellular pathogens and have been implicated in many autoimmune diseases. Th2 cells participate in host defense against parasitic worms but can also contribute to allergy and asthma. Each subtype is induced by cytokines present in the milieu (mainly IL-12 for Th1 cells, IL-4 for Th2 cells) and secretes characteristic effector cytokines (IFN-gamma and IL-2 by Th1 cells, IL-4 and IL- 10 by Th2 cells). IL-4 and IL-10 inhibit Th1 cells, while IFN-gamma suppresses Th2 function. MACROPHAGE AND FIBROBLAST CYTOKINES Macrophages and fibroblasts are the primary sources of cytokines in the rheumatoid synovium. Synovial macrophages and fibroblasts produce a plethora of proinflammatory factors in the joint involved in the cytokine network (Figure 1), including IL-1, IL-6, IL-8, IL-12, IL-15, IL-16, IL- 18, IL-32, TNF-alpha, granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), and multiple chemokines. These cytokines can participate in paracrine and autocrine networks that enhance and perpetuate synovial inflammation. For instance, macrophages and fibroblasts in the intimal lining can activate adjacent cells that, in turn, can produce mediators that can stimulate their neighbors. The concept of cytokine networks dominated by synovial lining cells played amajor role in the advent of anticytokine therapy in RA. Although proinflammatory cytokines can be counterbalanced by the suppressive cytokines (IL-10, TGFbeta), soluble receptors (TNF-alpha), binding proteins (IL-18), and naturally occurring receptor antagonists (IL- 1Ra), all of which are produced by macrophages and fibroblasts in the synovial intima, the concentrations are below those required to suppress inflammation. Although the cytokine network can be highly redundant, disease control can be achieved in many patients by inhibiting a single cytokine. TNF-alpha antagonists are the most salient example, in which one third to one half of patients have dramatic clinical responses to cytokine blockade In RA, TNF-alpha is mainly produced by synovial macrophages. The stimulating signals have not been defined but could involve a family of receptors that recognize specific molecular patterns and activate the innate immune system, and other cytokines like IL-15. TNF-alpha can then bind to two ubiquitously expressed receptors (TNF-RI and TNF-RII) to induce the release of other cytokines and metalloproteases by fibroblasts, decrease the synthesis of proteoglycans by chondrocytes, and promote the differentiation of monocytes to osteoclasts in the presence of RANKL. Interleukin 1 exhibits many properties that can contribute to inflammation in RA, including increased synthesis of IL-6, chemokines, Granulocyte macrophage colony- stimulating factor GM-CSF, prostaglandin and collagenase. Of the two forms of IL-1, IL-1 beta is secreted, whereas IL-1 alpha is expressed within cells and associated with cell membranes. Interleukin 18 is another proinflammatory member of the IL-1 family and induces the production of IFN-gamma, IL-8, GM-CSF, and TNF- alpha by synovial macrophages. Interluekin 6 has pleiotropic effects and influences systemic inflammation through its actions on hematopoiesis and many cell types of the immune system. IL-6 is perhaps the major factor that induces acute phase proteins like CRP by the liver. Very high levels of IL-6 are present in the synovial fluid of RA patients and type B synoviocytes are the major source. IL-6 is also implicated in the activation of the endothelium and contributes to bone erosion by stimulating the maturation of osteoclasts. In RA, IL-6 levels decrease dramatically after treatment with TNF inhibitors. MECHANISM OF JOINT DESTRUCTION The generation of new blood vessels is required to provide nutrients to the expanding synovial membrane and is an early event in the development of synovitis. ‫ ؛ أكسجني السائل الزليلي‬RA ‫يمكن أن يتفوق توسيع األنسجة في النهاية على تكوين األوعية الدموية في‬ ‫التوتر منخفض للغاية ويرتبط مع انخفاض درجة الحموضة ومستويات الالكتات العالية‬ The expanding tissue can ultimately outstrip angiogenesis in RA; synovial fluid oxygen tension is quite low and is associated with low pH and high lactate levels. Hypoxia is a potent stimulus for angiogenesis in the synovium, and factors that promote blood vessel growth, such as vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), IL-8, angiopoietin-1, and many others, are expressed in RA. Several anti-angiogenesis approaches can markedly attenuate arthritis in animal models. For instance, targeting the integrin alpha-v beta-3 expressed by proliferating blood vessels in the synovium or treating with antibodies to the type 1 VEGF receptor (VEGF-R1) suppress clinical and histologic evidence of disease. Activated type-B synoviocytes are a major source of inflammatory mediators and metalloproteinases in RA. Synoviocytes can be grown in vitro to study signal transduction systems that relay information from the environment to the nucleus and activate gene expression. Fibroblast like cells derived from the synovium of RA patients exhibit some unique aggressive properties. Insufficient synoviocyte apoptosis in RA probably contributes to intimal lining hyperplasia of the synovium due to several mechanisms, including low expression of anti-apoptotic genes and abnormal function of tumor suppressor genes. Cartilage Destruction Aggressive synoviocytes at sites of pannus overgrowth, cytokine-activated chondrocytes, and PMNs are major cell types responsible for destruction of the cartilage in RA. They release destructive enzymes in response to IL-1, TNF-alpha, IL-17, and immune complexes. Once the cartilage is compromised, mechanical stress works as an accelerating factor to enhance destruction. A variety of enzymes participate in extracellular matrix degradation of the joint, such as matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs; collagenases, gelatinases, and stromelysin), serine proteases (trypsin, chymotrypsin), and cathepsins. Reversible loss of proteoglycans occurs early, most likely due to the catabolic effect of cytokines and the production of stromelysins and aggrecanases. Bone Destruction Focal bone erosions are a hallmark of RA that can occur early in the disease and cause significant morbidity due to subchondral and the cortical bone damage. RA is also associated with periarticular bone loss adjacent to inflamed joints and generalized osteopenia, leading to increased risk of fracture in both the appendicular and axial skeleton. The cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying cartilage destruction and focal bone erosions are distinct. Synoviocytes, chondrocytes, and neutrophils are probably the major effectors of the former. Bone erosions are mainly caused by osteoclasts, which are derived from macrophage precursors. They accumulate at the pannus–bone interface and the subchondral marrow space. Receptor activator of NF-κB (RANK) and its ligand RANKL form the most important receptor– ligand pair that modulates bone resorption in RA. RANK is expressed by osteoclasts and modulates their maturation and activation. Expression of the RANKL on T cells and fibroblast like synoviocytes is promoted by cytokines such as TNF-alpha, IL-1, and IL-17. The RANK–RANKL system is antagonized by a soluble decoy receptor, osteoprotegerin (OPG), that binds to RANKL. Injection of OPG or deletion of the RANKL gene in animal models inhibits bone destruction but does not suppress inflammation. Of interest, anti–TNF-alpha agents can slow the progression rate of bone erosions in RA, even in patients without clinical improvement. Therefore, the inflammatory and destructive mechanisms in RA can be distinct. Innate and adaptive immunity both contribute to the pathogenesis of RA. B cell help Autoantibody production

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