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Anti-Ku syndrome with elevated CK and anti-Ku syndrome with anti-dsDNA are two distinct entities with different outcomes.

Lionel SpielmannBenoit NespolaFrançois SéveracEmmanuel AndresRomain KesslerAurélien GuffroyVincent PoindronThierry MartinBernard GenyJean SibiliaAlain Meyer
Published in: Annals of the rheumatic diseases (2019)
Clinico-biological features were clustered into three groups. Glomerulonephritis and ILD, the two fatal complications in this cohort, were unequally distributed between the three clusters that additionally differed on six clinico-biological features.Among features present at baseline, elevated serum level of creatine kinase (CK) and anti-dsDNA antibodies were generally mutually exclusive and most efficiently predicted the cluster belonging at last follow-up. Anti-Ku patients with elevated CK had a 22-fold higher risk of ILD while anti-Ku patients with anti-dsDNA antibodies had a 13-fold higher risk of glomerulonephritis CONCLUSION: "Anti-Ku with elevated CK" syndrome and "anti-Ku with anti-dsDNA" syndrome represent two distinct entities that are important to recognise in order to best tailor patient care.
Keyphrases
  • case report
  • type diabetes
  • protein kinase
  • metabolic syndrome
  • rheumatoid arthritis
  • adipose tissue
  • interstitial lung disease
  • weight loss