Journal article

Digital pitting scars are associated with a severe disease course and death in systemic sclerosis: a study from the EUSTAR cohort


Authors listHughes, Michael; Heal, Calvin; Henes, Joerg; Balbir-Gurman, Alexandra; Distler, Jorg H. W.; Airo, Paolo; Mueller-Ladner, Ulf; Hunzelmann, Nicolas; Kerzberg, Eduardo; Rudnicka, Lidia; Truchetet, Marie-Elise; Stebbings, Simon; Tanaka, Yoshiya; Hoffman-Vold, Anna Maria; Gabrielli, Armando; Distler, Oliver; Matucci-Cerinic, Marco

Publication year2022

Pages1141-1147

JournalRheumatology

Volume number61

Issue number3

ISSN1462-0324

eISSN1462-0332

Open access statusGreen

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/keab510

PublisherOxford University Press


Abstract
Objective Digital pitting scars (DPS) are frequent, but little studied in SSc to date. Methods An analysis of SSc patients enrolled in the EUSTAR database. Primary objectives were to (i) examine DPS prevalence; (ii) examine whether DPS are associated with digital ulcers (DUs) and active digital ischaemia (DUs or gangrene); and (iii) describe other associations with DPS including internal organ complications. Secondary objectives were whether DPS are associated with (i) functional impairment; (ii) structural microvascular disease; and (iii) mortality. Descriptive statistics and parametric/non-parametric tests were used. Binary logistic regression was used to examine the association between DPS and DUs, active digital ischaemia and mortality. Results A total of 9671 patients were included with reported DPS at any time point (n = 4924) or 'never' DPS (n = 4747). The majority (86.9%) were female and mean age was 55.7 years. DPS were associated with longer disease and Raynaud's duration (both P <= 0.001). DPS were associated with interstitial lung disease, pulmonary hypertension, conduction blocks, telangiectases, calcinosis (all P <= 0.001) and joint synovitis (P = 0.021). Patients were more likely to have more severe capillaroscopic abnormality and greater hand functional impairment. Multivariable logistic regression analyses showed that DPS were associated (odds ratio) with DUs: 22.03 (19.51-24.87), active digital ischaemia: 6.30 (5.34-7.42) and death: 1.86 (1.48-2.36). Conclusion DPS are associated with a severe disease course including death. The impact of DPS on hand function and ischaemia is significant. The presence of DPS should alert the clinician to a poor prognosis and need to optimize the therapeutic strategy.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleHughes, M., Heal, C., Henes, J., Balbir-Gurman, A., Distler, J., Airo, P., et al. (2022) Digital pitting scars are associated with a severe disease course and death in systemic sclerosis: a study from the EUSTAR cohort, Rheumatology, 61(3), pp. 1141-1147. https://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/keab510

APA Citation styleHughes, M., Heal, C., Henes, J., Balbir-Gurman, A., Distler, J., Airo, P., Mueller-Ladner, U., Hunzelmann, N., Kerzberg, E., Rudnicka, L., Truchetet, M., Stebbings, S., Tanaka, Y., Hoffman-Vold, A., Gabrielli, A., Distler, O., & Matucci-Cerinic, M. (2022). Digital pitting scars are associated with a severe disease course and death in systemic sclerosis: a study from the EUSTAR cohort. Rheumatology. 61(3), 1141-1147. https://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/keab510



Keywords


DEATHdigital ischaemiadigital pitting scarsEULAR SCLERODERMA TRIALSSCLERODERMASScULCERSVASCULOPATHY

Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 11:36