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Brain abnormalities in newly diagnosed neuropsychiatric lupus: systematic MRI approach and correlation with clinical and laboratory data in a large multicenter cohort.

Autoimmunity Reviews 2015 Februrary
OBJECTIVES: To describe brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) abnormalities in newly diagnosed neuropsychiatric lupus (NPSLE). To correlate them with clinical and laboratory data.

METHODS: This retrospective cross-sectional study included patients presenting NPSLE undergoing brain MRI within 6 months after onset between 2003 and 2012. Clinical and laboratory data were recorded. MRI findings were defined as inflammatory-like, large-vessel disease (LVD), and small-vessel disease (SVD); SVD was classified as white-matter hyperintensities (WMH), recent small subcortical infarcts, lacunes, microbleeds, and brain atrophy.

RESULTS: We included 108 patients (mean 40.6 ± 14.2 years; range 14-77), 91.7% women. The most frequent syndromes were headache (28.5%), cerebrovascular disease (15.5%), seizure (15.5%), and cognitive dysfunction (11.4%). Brain abnormalities were found in 59.3%. SVD was the most common (55.6%), followed by LVD (13%) and inflammatory-like lesions (6.5%). The most frequent SVD findings were WMH (53.7%), atrophy (18.5%), microbleeds (13.7%) and lacunes (11.1%). Cerebrovascular syndrome correlated with LVD (p = 0.001) and microbleeds (p = 0.002), cognitive dysfunction with WMH (p = 0.045) and myelopathy with inflammatory-like lesions (p = 0.020). Low C4 and CH50 correlated with inflammatory-like lesions (p < 0.001, p = 0.019) and lupus anticoagulant with WMH (p = 0.018), microbleeds (p = 0.002) and atrophy (p = 0.008).

CONCLUSIONS: Vascular disease is the hallmark of NPSLE. Certain syndromes and immunological patterns are prone to more extensive brain damage. MRI could provide significant clinical information and insights into the pathological substrate.

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