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Browsing by Author "Zekovic, Ana (57193403349)"

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    Association between the -174 C/G polymorphism in the interleukin-6 (IL-6) gene and gastrointestinal involvement in patients with systemic sclerosis
    (2018)
    Zekovic, Ana (57193403349)
    ;
    Vreca, Misa (57095923100)
    ;
    Spasovski, Vesna (26655022200)
    ;
    Andjelkovic, Marina (57197728167)
    ;
    Pavlovic, Sonja (7006514877)
    ;
    Damjanov, Nemanja (8503557800)
    Genetic predisposition to systemic sclerosis (SSc) has still not been fully revealed. Interleukin-6 (IL-6) is a mediator of T cell proliferation and fibrotic events in SSc. Polymorphisms in the IL-6 are found to be important in susceptibility to development of SSc. We aimed to assess the frequency of -174 C/G of IL-6 gene polymorphism in SSc patients and healthy controls, as well as correlation with disease manifestations. In the case-control study, 102 patients with SSc and 93 controls were included. PCR-RFLP method was performed for genotyping promotor variants -174 C/G of IL-6 gene. The expression level of IL-6 was determined by qRT-PCR on subset of 50 patients and 13 healthy controls with different IL-6 genotypes. We used UCLA GIT 2.0 questionnaire to assess gastrointestinal involvement in SSc patients. The expression level of IL-6 gene was significantly higher in patients with SSc in comparison with healthy controls (p < 0.05). Carriers of C-allele of IL-6 gene compared to those with G allele, showed higher expression of IL-6 gene (95.8 vs. 41.2, p < 0.05), higher GIT total score (0.85 vs. 0.5, p < 0.05) and higher distension scale score (1.4 ± 0.9 vs. 0.78 ± 0.8, p = 0.05). No significant differences in genotype distribution and allele frequency were observed between patients and controls. The expression of IL6 gene varies significantly during the course of SSc. The IL-6 gene variant -174 C/G (presence of C-allele) is associated with higher IL-6 gene expression and greater GIT impairment in patients with SSc. © 2018, International League of Associations for Rheumatology (ILAR).
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    Imaging of connective tissue diseases: Beyond visceral organ imaging?
    (2016)
    Cutolo, Maurizio (7103329735)
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    Damjanov, Nemanja (8503557800)
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    Ruaro, Barbara (55534688500)
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    Zekovic, Ana (57193403349)
    ;
    Smith, Vanessa (56181329700)
    Connective tissues diseases (CTDs) can also be diagnosed early by “external” and safe imaging methods beyond the visceral organ analysis. This study aims to explore various imaging techniques used in diagnosing CTDs. Skin impairment in systemic sclerosis (SSc) may be recognized and studied by the modified Rodnan skin score (mRSS), which has some drawbacks, whereas high-frequency ultrasound (US) seems advantageous for the early identification of skin involvement. Salivary gland involvement in Sjögren syndrome (SS) can be assessed using standard tests such as unstimulated salivary flow test, salivary gland scintigraphy or contrast sialography. However, US of the major salivary glands, as an alternative, seems a reliable method with good sensitivity and specificity for the diagnosis of SS. Both the qualitative and quantitative nailfold capillaroscopic (NVC) assessments in SSc patients affected by the Raynaud's phenomenon (RP) may assist in making a differential diagnosis between primary and secondary RP. Microcirculatory imaging by NVC, along with the laser Doppler analysis, seems useful in the prediction of complications and prognosis in CTDs (i.e. SSc) and in monitoring therapeutic trials. © 2016 Elsevier Ltd
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    Impact of alterations in X-linked IRAK1gene and miR-146a on susceptibility and clinical manifestations in patients with systemic sclerosis
    (2018)
    Vreca, Misa (57095923100)
    ;
    Andjelkovic, Marina (57197728167)
    ;
    Tosic, Natasa (15729686900)
    ;
    Zekovic, Ana (57193403349)
    ;
    Damjanov, Nemanja (8503557800)
    ;
    Pavlovic, Sonja (7006514877)
    ;
    Spasovski, Vesna (26655022200)
    Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is a heterogeneous multisystem autoimmune disease with unknown etiology. Numerous studies have indicated that the disease heterogeneity implies various genetic abnormalities. Considering that SSc is characterized by a strong sex bias and that the position of IRAK1 gene is on the X chromosome, we assume that variations in IRAK1 gene could explain female predominance of SSc. It was previously described that miR-146a has a role in ‘fine-tuning’ regulation of the TLR/NF-kB signaling pathway through down-regulation of IRAK1 gene. The aim of the present study was to analyze both variants and expression level of IRAK1 and miR-146a genes in terms of susceptibility to SSc and clinical presentation of SSc patients. We analyzed variants IRAK1 rs3027898 C > A and miR-146a rs2910164 C > G in 102 SSc patients and 66 healthy subjects. Genotyping was performed by Sanger sequencing. Expression level of IRAK1 mRNA and miR-146a in PBMCs was performed in subset of 50 patients and 13 healthy controls by RT-qPCR. Our results showed that there was no association between IRAK1 rs3027898 and the risk of SSc in women. However, the analysis of genotype distribution of the mir-146a rs2910164 C > G variant indicated that CC genotype shows strong association with lung fibrosis and active form of the disease. When expression level of IRAK1 gene was analyzed, we detected significant downregulation of IRAK1 mRNA in SSc patients compared to controls, as well as in male compared to female patients, in patients with ACAs autoantibodies and in patients with severe skin involvement. Regarding the expression level of miR-146a, we have found significantly reduced expression in SSc patients, in patients with skin involvement and in male SSc patients. The results from this study indicate that expression of IRAK1 gene could explain phenotypic heterogeneity of SSc and may be involved in the pathogenesis of SSc due to its differential expression in certain subgroups. Our results also suggested that miR-146a rs2910164 CC genotype may be predisposing factor for development lung fibrosis and more progressive form of SSc. Results from relative expression analysis of miR-146a demonstrated that changes in the level of this miRNA may have an impact on development and clinical course of SSc. © 2018 European Federation of Immunological Societies
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    Publication
    Impact of alterations in X-linked IRAK1gene and miR-146a on susceptibility and clinical manifestations in patients with systemic sclerosis
    (2018)
    Vreca, Misa (57095923100)
    ;
    Andjelkovic, Marina (57197728167)
    ;
    Tosic, Natasa (15729686900)
    ;
    Zekovic, Ana (57193403349)
    ;
    Damjanov, Nemanja (8503557800)
    ;
    Pavlovic, Sonja (7006514877)
    ;
    Spasovski, Vesna (26655022200)
    Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is a heterogeneous multisystem autoimmune disease with unknown etiology. Numerous studies have indicated that the disease heterogeneity implies various genetic abnormalities. Considering that SSc is characterized by a strong sex bias and that the position of IRAK1 gene is on the X chromosome, we assume that variations in IRAK1 gene could explain female predominance of SSc. It was previously described that miR-146a has a role in ‘fine-tuning’ regulation of the TLR/NF-kB signaling pathway through down-regulation of IRAK1 gene. The aim of the present study was to analyze both variants and expression level of IRAK1 and miR-146a genes in terms of susceptibility to SSc and clinical presentation of SSc patients. We analyzed variants IRAK1 rs3027898 C > A and miR-146a rs2910164 C > G in 102 SSc patients and 66 healthy subjects. Genotyping was performed by Sanger sequencing. Expression level of IRAK1 mRNA and miR-146a in PBMCs was performed in subset of 50 patients and 13 healthy controls by RT-qPCR. Our results showed that there was no association between IRAK1 rs3027898 and the risk of SSc in women. However, the analysis of genotype distribution of the mir-146a rs2910164 C > G variant indicated that CC genotype shows strong association with lung fibrosis and active form of the disease. When expression level of IRAK1 gene was analyzed, we detected significant downregulation of IRAK1 mRNA in SSc patients compared to controls, as well as in male compared to female patients, in patients with ACAs autoantibodies and in patients with severe skin involvement. Regarding the expression level of miR-146a, we have found significantly reduced expression in SSc patients, in patients with skin involvement and in male SSc patients. The results from this study indicate that expression of IRAK1 gene could explain phenotypic heterogeneity of SSc and may be involved in the pathogenesis of SSc due to its differential expression in certain subgroups. Our results also suggested that miR-146a rs2910164 CC genotype may be predisposing factor for development lung fibrosis and more progressive form of SSc. Results from relative expression analysis of miR-146a demonstrated that changes in the level of this miRNA may have an impact on development and clinical course of SSc. © 2018 European Federation of Immunological Societies
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    Long-term effects of immunosuppressive therapy on lung function in scleroderma patients
    (2018)
    Pavlov-Dolijanovic, Slavica (8452470400)
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    Vujasinovic Stupar, Nada (24831218300)
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    Zugic, Vladimir (13410862400)
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    Ostojic, Predrag (8503557700)
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    Zekovic, Ana (57193403349)
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    Zivanovic Radnic, Tatjana (26027699900)
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    Jeremic, Ivan (36016708800)
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    Tadic, Ivana (36617924700)
    The study aims to analyze the effects of induction treatment with cyclophosphamide (CYC) pulse therapy followed by maintenance treatment with other mild immunosuppressive agents on lung function in scleroderma (SSc) patients. Thirty patients with SSc (mean age 52 years, mean disease duration < 2 years) with forced vital capacity (FVC) ≤ 80% and/or diffusing capacity of carbon monoxide (DLco) ≤ 70% were included. Monthly CYC pulses were given for 6 months (induction treatment), followed by 3-monthly maintenance pulses for the next 18 months, and during the next 5 years patients received other mild immunosupressive therapy brought by the competent rheumatologist. The efficacy was evaluated by comparing FVC% and DLco% after 6, 24, and 84 months from the baseline. All patients completed induction and maintenance treatment with CYC. Three patients were lost to follow-up. The rest of 27 patients, during the next 5 years, received other immunosupressive agents (14 azathioprine, 9 methotrexate, and 4 mycophenolate mofetil). Three patients died in the 4 years of follow-up. By 6, 24, and 84 months, the mean FVC and DLco changes were + 0.47 and + 2.10, + 3.30 and − 2.49, and + 1.53 and − 3.76%, respectively. These changes were not significantly different from the baseline values. CYC does not appear to result in clinically significant improvement of pulmonary function but fulfilled criteria of stable disease. Maintenance treatment with other mild immunosupressive agents preserves the benefits achieved during CYC treatment. © 2018, International League of Associations for Rheumatology (ILAR).
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    The efficacy and safety of autologous conditioned serum (ACS) injections compared with betamethasone and placebo injections in the treatment of chronic shoulder joint pain due to supraspinatus tendinopathy: A prospective, randomized, double-blind, controlled study
    (2018)
    Damjanov, Nemanja (8503557800)
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    Barac, Branko (56199801200)
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    Colic, Jelena (55540968700)
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    Stevanovic, Vladan (59131919800)
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    Zekovic, Ana (57193403349)
    ;
    Tulic, Goran (23036995600)
    Aims: Autologous conditioned serum (ACS; marketed as Orthokine®) is an autologous blood product that has previously shown efficacy in treatment of joint osteoarthritis, spinal radiculopathy, tendon and muscle injuries in randomized controlled trials. In this 24-week, randomized, double-blind study, we compared the efficacy and safety of ACS with glucocorticoid (betamethasone) injections in chronic supraspinatus tendinopathy patients. Material and methods: Thirty-two patients with chronic supraspinatus tendinopathy were enrolled in the study. The ACS group received four ACS injections once weekly over four weeks and the glucocorticoid group received three betamethasone injections once weekly over three weeks with a placebo (saline) injection at week 4 into the enthesis and paratenon of the supraspinatus tendon. Study endpoints were pain intensity (VAS) and Constant Shoulder Score (CSS) assessed at weeks 0, 4 and 24. Results: Shoulder pain intensity improved after 4 weeks and significantly improved after 24 weeks in patients treated with ACS compared with those treated with glucocorticoids (pain intensity week 4: ACS=22.0, glucocorticoid=32.0; week 24: ACS=15.0, glucocorticoid=40.0). CSS improved to a similar extent in both groups after 4 weeks. After 24 weeks, ACS patients exhibited significantly greater CSS improvements than glucocorticoid patients. Adverse events (n=8) were reported in betamethasone patients. Conclusions: Compared with betamethasone, ACS therapy improved joint function and reduced shoulder pain more effectively after 4 weeks of treatment; these improvements were sustained to week 24. Combined with its favorable safety profile, ACS appears to be a more effective treatment than glucocorticoids and could enhance the quality of life in patients with chronic rotator cuff tendinopathy. © 2018, Societatea Romana de Ultrasonografie in Medicina si Biologie.
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    Validation of Serbian version of UCLA Scleroderma Clinical Trial Consortium Gastrointestinal Tract Instrument in 104 patients with systemic sclerosis
    (2017)
    Zekovic, Ana (57193403349)
    ;
    Damjanov, Nemanja (8503557800)
    Gastrointestinal (GI) involvement is the leading cause of morbidity with great impact on health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in patients with systemic sclerosis (SSc). The UCLA-GIT 2.0 is a disease-specific HRQOL instrument for the assessment of GI symptoms severity in patients with SSc. We evaluated reliability and validity of the Serbian version of UCLA-GIT 2.0 by assessing association of GI involvement and other disease manifestations in patients with SSc. UCLA-GIT 2.0 was adapted into Serbian and administered to 104 patients with SSc who had previously completed the SF-36 questionnaire. We evaluated the internal consistency reliability and associations between the UCLA-GIT 2.0 and SF-36 scales. Data from patients’ medical history were reviewed for other disease manifestations. UCLA-GIT 2.0 had acceptable reliability (defined as Cronbach’s alpha >0.69) and the majority of hypothesized correlations with SF-36 scale scores were of moderate magnitude (coefficient ≥ 0.30). Active disease and pulmonary fibrosis were associated with higher GIT Total scale score (p < 0.05). Distension mostly correlated with HRQOL impairment (r = 0.70, p < 0.001). The Serbian version of the UCLA-GIT 2.0 questionnaire has acceptable reliability and validity for the assessment of GI involvement in patients with SSc. GI impairment is very frequent in patients with active SSc, as well in those with pulmonary fibrosis. © 2017, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.
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    Validation of Serbian version of UCLA Scleroderma Clinical Trial Consortium Gastrointestinal Tract Instrument in 104 patients with systemic sclerosis
    (2017)
    Zekovic, Ana (57193403349)
    ;
    Damjanov, Nemanja (8503557800)
    Gastrointestinal (GI) involvement is the leading cause of morbidity with great impact on health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in patients with systemic sclerosis (SSc). The UCLA-GIT 2.0 is a disease-specific HRQOL instrument for the assessment of GI symptoms severity in patients with SSc. We evaluated reliability and validity of the Serbian version of UCLA-GIT 2.0 by assessing association of GI involvement and other disease manifestations in patients with SSc. UCLA-GIT 2.0 was adapted into Serbian and administered to 104 patients with SSc who had previously completed the SF-36 questionnaire. We evaluated the internal consistency reliability and associations between the UCLA-GIT 2.0 and SF-36 scales. Data from patients’ medical history were reviewed for other disease manifestations. UCLA-GIT 2.0 had acceptable reliability (defined as Cronbach’s alpha >0.69) and the majority of hypothesized correlations with SF-36 scale scores were of moderate magnitude (coefficient ≥ 0.30). Active disease and pulmonary fibrosis were associated with higher GIT Total scale score (p < 0.05). Distension mostly correlated with HRQOL impairment (r = 0.70, p < 0.001). The Serbian version of the UCLA-GIT 2.0 questionnaire has acceptable reliability and validity for the assessment of GI involvement in patients with SSc. GI impairment is very frequent in patients with active SSc, as well in those with pulmonary fibrosis. © 2017, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.

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