Systemic lupus erythematosus Study Guide
Study Guide
📖 Core Concepts
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) – a multisystem autoimmune disease where auto‑antibodies attack healthy tissues, causing flares and remission.
Autoantibodies – most important are antinuclear antibodies (ANA) (high sensitivity) and anti‑double‑stranded DNA (anti‑dsDNA) (high specificity).
Immune‑complex (type III) hypersensitivity – circulating immune complexes deposit in organs, activate complement, and drive inflammation.
Complement consumption – low serum C3/C4 indicates active disease because complexes use up complement proteins.
Classification vs. Diagnosis – ACR/1997 and 2019 EULAR/ACR criteria (≥4/11 items) are research tools; clinicians also rely on ANA, anti‑dsDNA, clinical picture.
Hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) – cornerstone DMARD; reduces mortality (54 %), flares, and long‑term organ damage.
Organ‑specific risk – kidney (lupus nephritis), heart (Libman‑Sacks endocarditis, accelerated atherosclerosis), CNS (neuropsychiatric SLE), skin (malar rash, discoid lesions).
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📌 Must Remember
Epidemiology: 9 × higher in women (child‑bearing age); prevalence 20–70/100 k.
Key lab markers:
ANA – sensitive (>95 %) but not specific.
Anti‑dsDNA – specific (70 % of pts); levels parallel disease activity.
Low C3/C4 – sign of active immune‑complex disease.
Antiphospholipid antibodies – ↑ thrombosis, false‑positive VDRL.
ACR 1997 criteria: 4 of 11 items (malar rash, discoid rash, serositis, oral ulcers, arthritis, photosensitivity, hematologic disorder, renal disorder, ANA, immunologic disorder).
First‑line medication: HCQ for all patients unless contraindicated.
Steroid stewardship: Use lowest effective dose; chronic >5 mg pred equivalent ↑ CVD, osteoporosis, cataracts.
Renal protocol: Mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) preferred for lupus nephritis; cyclophosphamide for severe/induction.
Pregnancy safety: HCQ safe; avoid cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, high‑dose steroids when possible.
Mortality: Cardiovascular disease is leading cause; >90 % survive >10 yr, but overall mortality remains ↑ vs general population.
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🔄 Key Processes
Autoantibody Generation
Genetic predisposition (HLA, C4 copy number) + environmental trigger → loss of tolerance → B‑cell activation → ANA → anti‑dsDNA, antiphospholipid, anti‑Smith, etc.
Immune‑Complex Deposition
Circulating antibodies bind nuclear antigens → complexes → deposit in glomeruli, skin, serosa → complement activation → inflammation.
Complement Consumption
Classical pathway → C3/C4 ↓ → lab marker of active disease.
Renal Involvement Pathway
Immune‑complexes in glomeruli → “wire‑loop” deposits → proteinuria/hematuria → progressive fibrosis if untreated.
Drug‑Induced Lupus (DIL)
Chronic exposure to hydralazine, procainamide, minocycline, etc. → lupus‑compatible symptoms + positive ANA, anti‑histone; resolves after drug withdrawal.
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🔍 Key Comparisons
ANA vs. Anti‑dsDNA
ANA: highly sensitive, low specificity.
Anti‑dsDNA: lower sensitivity, high specificity; tracks disease activity.
Hydroxychloroquine vs. Corticosteroids
HCQ: long‑term disease‑modifying, mortality benefit, minimal acute toxicity.
Steroids: rapid control of flares, high short‑ and long‑term side‑effect burden.
Mycophenolate vs. Cyclophosphamide (nephritis induction)
MMF: oral, fewer gonadal toxicities, comparable efficacy in many protocols.
Cyclophosphamide: IV, higher infection & infertility risk; reserved for severe/ refractory disease.
Drug‑Induced Lupus vs. Idiopathic SLE
DIL: usually anti‑histone antibodies, resolves on cessation, less organ damage.
Idiopathic: broader autoantibody profile, chronic course, multi‑organ involvement.
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⚠️ Common Misunderstandings
“ANA negative rules out SLE.” – Rare ANA‑negative cases exist; diagnosis relies on clinical criteria plus other serologies.
“All rashes in SLE are malar.” – SLE skin disease includes discoid, subacute, and photosensitive rashes; not all are butterfly‑shaped.
“Hydroxychloroquine is harmless.” – Retinal toxicity (2 % after 10 yr) mandates baseline and annual eye exams.
“Pregnancy cures lupus.” – Pregnancy can worsen disease activity and increase fetal risks; careful monitoring is essential.
“Low complement always means active disease.” – Complement can be low chronically in some patients; interpret in clinical context.
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🧠 Mental Models / Intuition
“Immune‑complex → complement → organ damage” – Visualize a “sticky net” (immune complexes) that drags complement proteins, leaving the net depleted (low C3/C4) and the organ inflamed.
“Fire‑fighter analogy” – HCQ is the pre‑emptive patrol (prevents flares), steroids are the fire‑truck (rushes in for an active blaze).
“Gender bias = estrogen + X‑chromosome escape” – Think of extra estrogen as fuel and extra X‑linked immune genes as extra ignition switches in females.
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🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases
Seronegative Lupus: Rare patients meet clinical criteria but lack ANA/anti‑dsDNA; consider skin biopsy (lupus band test) or repeat testing.
Drug‑Induced Lupus with anti‑dsDNA: Occasionally DIL can produce anti‑dsDNA; distinguish by rapid resolution after drug stop.
Low complement with infection: Acute infections can also lower C3/C4; rule out infection before intensifying immunosuppression.
Pregnancy‑related nephritis flare: Distinguish from pre‑eclampsia by checking anti‑dsDNA, complement, and proteinuria patterns.
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📍 When to Use Which
Mild‑to‑moderate disease (skin, arthritis, fatigue): Start HCQ + NSAIDs; add low‑dose steroids only for flare control.
Severe organ involvement (nephritis, CNS, serositis): High‑dose steroids + immunosuppressant (MMF or cyclophosphamide).
Refractory disease despite standard therapy: Consider belimumab or rituximab; assess infection risk.
Pregnant patient: Continue HCQ; switch to azathioprine if immunosuppression needed; avoid cyclophosphamide & methotrexate.
Drug‑induced lupus suspicion: Stop offending drug → monitor; if symptoms persist, treat as idiopathic SLE.
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👀 Patterns to Recognize
“Malar rash + positive ANA + low complement” → classic SLE presentation.
“Proteinuria + anti‑dsDNA rise + C3 drop” → active lupus nephritis flare.
“Thrombosis + anticardiolipin / lupus anticoagulant” → antiphospholipid syndrome; start low‑dose aspirin or warfarin.
“Fatigue + anemia + depression” → multifactorial lupus fatigue; screen for thyroid, treat anemia, address mood.
“New joint pain + non‑erosive arthritis” → lupus arthritis (distinguish from rheumatoid).
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🗂️ Exam Traps
Distractor: “Anti‑Smith antibody is the most sensitive test.” – False. It’s highly specific but low sensitivity.
Distractor: “Hydroxychloroquine is contraindicated in pregnancy.” – False. It is safe and recommended.
Distractor: “Low complement always indicates renal disease.” – False. Low C3/C4 can occur with any active immune‑complex disease.
Distractor: “All patients with SLE develop renal involvement.” – False. Only 30‑50 % develop lupus nephritis.
Distractor: “Cyclophosphamide is first‑line for all lupus patients.” – False. Reserved for severe organ disease; MMF is preferred for most nephritis.
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