Seropositivity in patients with interstitial lung disease (ILD) without connective tissue disease (CTD) does not seem to contribute to improved outcomes or treatment response, a study has shown.
This finding suggests the importance of other disease features in determining prognosis and predicting response to immunosuppression, according to the investigators.
A prospective registry was used to identify a total of 1,570 non-CTD patients (with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, hypersensitivity pneumonitis, interstitial pneumonia with autoimmune features, or unclassified ILD) and 181 rheumatoid arthritis (RA)-ILD patients.
The investigators used linear mixed-effect and Cox proportional hazards models, adjusted for age, sex, smoking pack-years, and baseline forced vital capacity (FVC), to compare longitudinal FVC, transplant-free survival, and incidence of progressive fibrosing-ILD (PF-ILD) between seronegative non-CTD ILD (reference group), seropositive non-CTD ILD, and RA-ILD.
They also analysed the interaction between seropositivity and immunosuppression on FVC decline in patients with at least 6 months of follow-up before and after treatment.
Of the patients, 217 (13.8 percent) had seropositive non-CTD ILD who showed similar rates of FVC decline and transplant-free survival compared to those with seronegative non-CTD ILD. However, they were more likely to meet the criteria for PF-ILD (hazard ratio [HR], 1.35; p=0.004).
RA-ILD patients had slower FVC decline (p=0.03), less PF-ILD (HR, 0.75; p=0.03), and lower likelihood of lung transplant or death (HR, 0.66; p=0.01) than those with seronegative non-CTD ILD. Of note, no interaction was observed between seropositivity and treatment on FVC decline in non-CTD ILD.