Journal article

Older age onset of systemic sclerosis - accelerated disease progression in all disease subsets


Authors listMoinzadeh, Pia; Kuhr, Kathrin; Siegert, Elise; Mueller-Ladner, Ulf; Riemekasten, Gabriela; Guenther, Claudia; Koetter, Ina; Henes, Joerg; Blank, Norbert; Zeidler, Gabriele; Pfeiffer, Christiane; Juche, Aaron; Jandova, Ilona; Ehrchen, Jan; Schmalzing, Marc; Susok, Laura; Schmeiser, Tim; Sunderkoetter, Cord; Distler, Joerg H. W.; Worm, Margitta; Kreuter, Alexander; Krieg, Thomas; Hunzelman, Nicolas

Publication year2020

Pages3380-3389

JournalRheumatology

Volume number59

Issue number11

ISSN1462-0324

eISSN1462-0332

Open access statusHybrid

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/keaa127

PublisherOxford University Press


Abstract

Objectives. Systemic sclerosis is a heterogeneous, multisystem disease. It can occur at any age, but most patients develop the disease between the age of 40 to 50 years. There is controversial evidence on whether/how the age at disease onset affects their clinical phenotype. We here investigate the relationship between age at disease onset and symptoms in a large cohort of SSc patients (IcSSc, dcSSc and SSc-overlap syndromes).

Methods. Clinical data of the registry of the German Network for Systemic Scleroderma including 3281 patients were evaluated and subdivided into three age groups at disease onset (<40years, 40-60 years, >60 years).

Results. Among all SSc patients, 24.5% developed their first non-Raynaud phenomenon symptoms at the age <40years, and 22.5% were older than 60 years of age. In particular, older patients at onset developed the IcSSc subset significantly more often. Furthermore, they had pulmonary hypertension more often, but digital ulcerations less often. Remarkably, the course of the disease was more rapidly progressing in the older cohort (>60 years), except for gastrointestinal and musculoskeletal involvement. No significant difference was found for the use of corticosteroids. However, significantly, fewer patients older than 60 years received immunosuppressive treatment.

Conclusion. In this large registry, similar to 25% of patients developed SSc at an age above 60years with an increased frequency of IcSSc. In this age group, an onset of internal organ involvement was significantly accelerated across all three subsets. These findings suggest that, in the elderly cohort, more frequent follow-up examinations are required for an earlier detection of organ complications.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleMoinzadeh, P., Kuhr, K., Siegert, E., Mueller-Ladner, U., Riemekasten, G., Guenther, C., et al. (2020) Older age onset of systemic sclerosis - accelerated disease progression in all disease subsets, Rheumatology, 59(11), pp. 3380-3389. https://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/keaa127

APA Citation styleMoinzadeh, P., Kuhr, K., Siegert, E., Mueller-Ladner, U., Riemekasten, G., Guenther, C., Koetter, I., Henes, J., Blank, N., Zeidler, G., Pfeiffer, C., Juche, A., Jandova, I., Ehrchen, J., Schmalzing, M., Susok, L., Schmeiser, T., Sunderkoetter, C., Distler, J., ...Hunzelman, N. (2020). Older age onset of systemic sclerosis - accelerated disease progression in all disease subsets. Rheumatology. 59(11), 3380-3389. https://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/keaa127



Keywords


age at disease onsetGERMAN NETWORK FOR SYSTEMIC SCLERODERMAolder ageSCLERODERMASScSystemic sclerosis

Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 11:18