The clinical manifestations and outcomes of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) are remarkably heterogeneous. In this thesis, issues relating to the diagnosis and prognosis of SLE were studied,... Show moreThe clinical manifestations and outcomes of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) are remarkably heterogeneous. In this thesis, issues relating to the diagnosis and prognosis of SLE were studied, focussing on the application of histopathologic evaluation in conjunction with clinical features in the setting of lupus nephritis (LN) and neuropsychiatric SLE (NP-SLE). In the first part, we demonstrated that classification criteria for SLE cannot be unequivocally applied to patients from nephrology clinics who present with full house glomerular deposits suggestive of LN/SLE. The patients with full house glomerular deposits without clinical SLE represented a distinct entity with a remarkably poor renal outcome. In the second part, clinical and histopathologic determinants of renal outcome were investigated to improve prognostication in LN. First, we identified a subgroup of patients with class III/IV LN with favourable renal outcome indicating that the current classification warrants refinement. Next, we identified prognosticators that may add to the current histopathologic classification of LN. The last part of this thesis was focused on the aetiopathogenesis of SLE, in which the complement system was identified as an important player and thereby therapeutic target in neuropsychiatric lupus and in which pregnancy-acquired microchimerism in relation to the occurrence of SLE was further investigated. Show less
The term __chimerism__ originates from Greek mythology and refers to the creature Chimaera, whose body was in front a lion, the back a serpent and the midsection a goat. In medicine, the term... Show moreThe term __chimerism__ originates from Greek mythology and refers to the creature Chimaera, whose body was in front a lion, the back a serpent and the midsection a goat. In medicine, the term chimerism refers to an individual, organ or part consisting of tissues of diverse genetic constitution. Pregnancy, blood transfusion and organ transplantation are potential causes of chimerism. In this thesis the occurrence of chimerism is investigated in different organs of healthy women, of women with the autoimmune disease Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) and of women that received a renal allograft. To demonstrate chimerism, male cells were detected in female organs by using in situ hybridization of the Y chromosome. Chimerism was found in 18% of healthy organs, in about 50% of organs derived from women with SLE and in none of the skin tumors investigated from female renal allograft recipients. In various organ types and both in women with and without sons and women with and without a transfusion history, chimerism was present. In this thesis we describe these results and review data from the ancient and recent literature. With all these data in hand, we speculate about the sources of chimerism and its implications on immunity. Show less