Real-Life Cause-Effect Relations Between Urinary IL-6 Levels and Specific and Nonspecific Symptoms in a Patient With Mild SLE Disease Activity

Little is known about the real-time cause-effect relations between IL-6 concentrations and SLE symptoms. A 52-year-old woman with mild SLE activity collected her entire urine for the determination of IL-6/creatinine and protein/creatinine levels (ELISA, HPLC) for a period of 56 days in 12 h interval...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in immunology 2021-12, Vol.12, p.718838-718838
Hauptverfasser: Schubert, Christian, Seizer, Lennart, Chamson, Emil, König, Paul, Sepp, Norbert, Ocaña-Peinado, Francisco M, Schnapka-Köpf, Mirjam, Fuchs, Dietmar
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Little is known about the real-time cause-effect relations between IL-6 concentrations and SLE symptoms. A 52-year-old woman with mild SLE activity collected her entire urine for the determination of IL-6/creatinine and protein/creatinine levels (ELISA, HPLC) for a period of 56 days in 12 h intervals (total: 112 measurements). Additionally, she answered questionnaires (VAS) on oral ulceration, facial rash, joint pain, fatigue and tiredness and measured her temperature orally twice a day. Time-series analyses consisted of ARIMA modeling and cross-correlational analyses (one lag = 12 h, significance level = < 0.05). Statistical analyses showed that increased urinary IL-6 concentrations preceded increased urinary protein levels by 36-48 h (lag3: r=+.225; =.017) and that, in the opposite direction of effect, increased urinary protein preceded urinary IL-6 decreases by 12-24 h (lag1: r=-.322;
ISSN:1664-3224
1664-3224
DOI:10.3389/fimmu.2021.718838