Patients with systemic sclerosis (SSc) have an increased risk of malignancy compared with the general population. Recently, SSc patients with anti-RNA polymerase III antibody have been reported to have an increased risk of malignancy as compared with those with other disease-specific autoantibodies in US, European and Australian populations. Therefore, we studied the relationship between disease-specific autoantibodies and malignancy in 261 Japanese SSc patients. The prevalence of malignancy was significantly higher in patients with anti-RNA polymerase III antibody (7/22, 31.8%) than in those with anti-topoisomerase I antibody (2/82, 2.4%) and in those with anticentromere antibody (8/137, 5.8%). Importantly, among seven patients with anti-RNA polymerase III antibody and malignancy, three patients (42.9%) developed malignancy from 6 months before to 12 months after SSc onset. Thus, malignancy complication in Japanese SSc patients with anti-RNA polymerase III antibody is as high as that in other races, suggesting that SSc patients with anti-RNA polymerase III antibody share the same pathological process among different ethnic groups.
Keywords: Japanese; anti-RNA polymerase III antibody; malignancy; synchronous onset; systemic sclerosis.
© 2015 Japanese Dermatological Association.