{Reference Type}: Case Reports {Title}: Tuberculosis mimicking the onset of systemic lupus erythematosus flare: Case based review. {Author}: Liu Y;Che G;Liu Y;Xu K; {Journal}: Int J Rheum Dis {Volume}: 26 {Issue}: 6 {Year}: Jun 2023 1 {Factor}: 2.558 {DOI}: 10.1111/1756-185X.14585 {Abstract}: OBJECTIVE: To analyze the clinical features of lupus-like tuberculosis (TB).
METHODS: Three cases of TB imitating systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) flare were collected in our hospital. Based on literature review, there are only 3 reports of TB resembling lupus flare rather than SLE per se.
RESULTS: The 3 cases of lupus mimickers, with a mean age of 30.3 years, ranging from 27 to 32 years, had atypical features of SLE, namely no typical butterfly erythema, lupus hair, alopecia or proteinuria, similar to the patients reported in the 3 previously mentioned studies. Emergence of different autoantibodies like anti-nuclear antibodies, anti-double-stranded DNA, anti-nucleosome antibodies, and anti-histone antibodies could occur in TB, mostly as an epiphenomenon. In patients with specific serological anti-Sm and hypocomplementemia, active TB cannot be easily ruled out. The presence of autoantibodies neither altered the clinical manifestations and radiographic findings of active TB, nor were detectable after infections are resolved. The resistance of the SLE manifestations to the steroid and immunosuppressive treatment suggests the contribution of an infectious disease.
CONCLUSIONS: TB stimulated the production of autoantibodies, with shared affinity for mycobacteria and human antigens, which may have led to lupus mimickers.