Logo-aim
Arch Iran Med. 2010;13(2): 135-142.
PMID: 20187668
Scopus ID: 77949344205
  Abstract View: 1934
  PDF Download: 1201

Original Article

Correlation between Serum Levels of Soluble Fas (CD95/Apo-1) with Disease Activity in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Patients in Khorasan, Iran

Maryam Sahebari, Mohammad Reza Hatef, Zahra Rezaieyazdi, Mahnaz Abbasi, Bita Abbasi, Mahmoud Mahmoudi
*Corresponding Author:

Abstract

Background: Soluble Fas (sFas) is a marker of apoptosis that appears to increase in the serum of systemic lupus erythematosus patients and may have a correlation with disease activity. The exact role of sFas in apoptosis is not clear. The purpose of this study is to assess the correlation between serum levels of soluble Fas (Apo/1-CD95) and the activity of systemic lupus erythematosus.

Patients and Methods: Our study was performed on 114 systemic lupus erythematosus patients who were compared with 50 randomly selected sex, age and race-matched healthy controls. Disease activity was defined according to the Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Disease Activity Index (SLEDAI-2K). All physical exams and laboratory parameters were collected to determine the SLEDAI. sFas levels were determined using a commercially available ELISA kit.

Results: There was a significant difference between serum levels of sFas in the case and control groups (P=0.001). A significant correlation coefficient existed between the sFas and SLEDAI2K variables (P=0.001, r=0.494). Significant statistical difference was found between serum levels of sFas in the active and inactive phases of disease according to SLEDAI≤ 9 or ≥10, (P=0.002). The sFas levels were 270 – 300 pg/mL for SLEDAI≤9 and 355-502 pg/mL for SLEDAI≥10, with a confidence interval of 95%.

Conclusion: This study shows a significant elevation of sFas levels in the sera of systemic lupus erythematosus patients with active disease; therefore it can be used as an appropriate marker for evaluation of disease activity.

First Name
Last Name
Email Address
Comments
Security code


Abstract View: 1935

Your browser does not support the canvas element.


PDF Download: 1201

Your browser does not support the canvas element.

ePublished: 01 Feb 2010
EndNote EndNote

(Enw Format - Win & Mac)

BibTeX BibTeX

(Bib Format - Win & Mac)

Bookends Bookends

(Ris Format - Mac only)

EasyBib EasyBib

(Ris Format - Win & Mac)

Medlars Medlars

(Txt Format - Win & Mac)

Mendeley Web Mendeley Web
Mendeley Mendeley

(Ris Format - Win & Mac)

Papers Papers

(Ris Format - Win & Mac)

ProCite ProCite

(Ris Format - Win & Mac)

Reference Manager Reference Manager

(Ris Format - Win only)

Refworks Refworks

(Refworks Format - Win & Mac)

Zotero Zotero

(Ris Format - Firefox Plugin)