Session Information
Date: Sunday, October 26, 2025
Title: (0506–0521) Sjögren’s Disease – Basic & Clinical Science Poster I: Etiology, Pathogenesis, Diagnosis
Session Type: Poster Session A
Session Time: 10:30AM-12:30PM
Background/Purpose: There is an unmet clinical need for identification of novel biomarkers of systemic complications and lymphoma in primary Sjögren disease (SD). Anti-cytosolic 5′-nucleotidase 1A (anti-cN1A) antibodies have been reported in SD but their clinical significance in this specific context is currently unknown. Anti-cN1A have been originally described in inclusion body myositis (IBM). Both SD and IBM are associated with hematological malignancies. The objectives of this study were to determine the clinical significance of anti-cN1A antibodies and their value as a predictive biomarker of non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) in SD.
Methods: Baseline serum levels of anti-cN1A were measured in a prospective discovery cohort of 377 patients with SD, from the French ASSESS cohort, whose primary objective was to prospectively examine the incidence and predictors of systemic complications and lymphoma in SD. The significance of anti-cN1A positivity in the ASSESS cohort was analyzed in univariate and multivariate models. Multivariate analysis included variables associated with anti-cN1A positivity in univariate analyses with a p-value < 0.2. An independent validation case-control cohort of 58 SD patients (26 patients with untreated SD-NHL at the time of blood sampling and 32 patients with SD and no lymphoma despite ≥10-year follow-up), from the Athens’ University Hospital SD cohort, was also screened for anti-cN1A antibodies.
Results: Twenty-nine SD patients tested positive for anti-cN1A (29/377 [7.7 %] [95% CI: 0.05-0.11]). Only one patient in the anti-cN1A positive group was diagnosed with myositis during the follow-up, which fulfilled IBM criteria (1/29 [3.4 %] vs. 1/348 [0.3%] in the anti-cN1A negative group, p = 0.024). Anti-cN1A positive patients had more frequently lymphadenopathy at baseline (8/29 [27.6 %] vs. 44/346 [12.7 %], p = 0.026) and more frequently developed lymphoma during follow-up (incident NHL: 3/29 [10.3%] in the anti-cN1A positive vs. 6/348 [1.7%] in the anti-cN1A negative patients, p = 0.003). The association between SD-NHL and anti-cN1A positivity remained significant (p=0.008) in multivariate analysis taking into account some previously reported predictors of lymphoma including lymphadenopathy, beta2-microglobulin and BAFF serum levels.In the validation cohort, patients with SD-NHL had more frequently anti-cN1A positivity as compared with SD patients and no lymphoma (4/26 [12%] vs 0/32 [0%], p= 0.039).
Conclusion: In two independent cohorts of well-phenotyped SD patients, anti-cN1A positivity was associated with lymphoma. Anti-cN1A positivity might therefore represent a novel predictive biomarker of SD-related lymphoma.
To cite this abstract in AMA style:
Duret P, Bouchard-Marmen M, Chatzis L, Giannini M, Severac F, Renaud F, Levy D, Nespola B, Chatelus E, Dernis E, Devauchelle V, Dieude P, Dubost J, Fauchais A, Geny B, Hachulla E, larroche C, Le Guern V, Morel J, Perdriger A, Salliot C, SARAUX A, Sène D, Sibilia J, Christelle S, Vittecoq O, Seror R, Nocturne G, Goules A, Tzioufas A, Mariette X, GOTTENBERG J, Meyer A. Association between anti-cytosolic 5′-nucleotidase 1A (anti-cN1A) antibodies and lymphoma in primary Sjögren Disease (SD) [abstract]. Arthritis Rheumatol. 2025; 77 (suppl 9). https://acrabstracts.org/abstract/association-between-anti-cytosolic-5-nucleotidase-1a-anti-cn1a-antibodies-and-lymphoma-in-primary-sjogren-disease-sd/. Accessed .« Back to ACR Convergence 2025
ACR Meeting Abstracts - https://acrabstracts.org/abstract/association-between-anti-cytosolic-5-nucleotidase-1a-anti-cn1a-antibodies-and-lymphoma-in-primary-sjogren-disease-sd/