Claudia Cristina Ferreira Vasconcelos
Universidade Federal do Estado do Rio de Janeiro
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Brain Behavior and Immunity | 2014
Thais B. Ferreira; Priscila O. Barros; Bruna Teixeira; Tatiane Cassano; Newton Centurião; Taissa M. Kasahara; Joana Hygino; Claudia Cristina Ferreira Vasconcelos; Helcio Alvarenga Filho; Regina Maria Papais Alvarenga; Ana Cristina Wing; Regis M. Andrade; Arnaldo F.B. Andrade; Cleonice A.M. Bento
Dopamine (DA) is a neurotransmitter produced mainly in the central nervous system (CNS) that has immunomodulatory actions on T cells. As the multiple sclerosis (MS) has long been regarded as an autoimmune disease of CNS mediated by T cells, the objective of this study was to evaluate the impact of DA on in vitro functional status of T cells from relapsing-remitting (RR)-MS patients. Peripheral T-cells from RR-MS patients were activated by mitogens and cell proliferation and cytokine production were assayed by [(3)H]-thymidine uptake and ELISA, respectively. Our results demonstrated that DA enhanced in vitro T cell proliferation and Th17-related cytokines in MS-derived cell cultures. In addition, this catecholamine reduced Treg-related cytokines (IL-10 and TGF-β) release by activated CD4(+) T cells. These DA-induced effects on T cells were mainly dependent on IL-6 production by both polyclonally-activated CD4(+) T cells and LPS-stimulated monocytes. Furthermore, the production of IL-17 and IL-6 by MS-derived T cells was directly related with neurological disability (EDSS score), and the release of these cytokines was less sensitive to glucocorticoid inhibition in MS patients than in control group, mainly after DA addition. In conclusion, our data suggest that DA amplifies glucocorticoid-resistant Th17 phenotype in MS patients, and this phenomenon could be, at least in part, due to its ability to induce IL-6 production by monocytes and CD4(+) T cells.
Multiple Sclerosis Journal | 2010
Claudia Cristina Ferreira Vasconcelos; Luiz Claudio Santos Thuler; Gutemberg Augusto Cruz dos Santos; Marcos Papais Alvarenga; Marina Papais Alvarenga; Solange Camargo; Regina Maria Papais Alvarenga
Recent studies have suggested faster clinical progression and greater disability in multiple sclerosis patients of African descent. This study analysed the effect of ethnicity on progression and disability.Sixty-five patients with primary progressive multiple sclerosis were selected and classified as being of African descent or white. Time from onset of the disease until reaching Expanded Disability Status Scale grades 3, 6, and 8 was assessed, as well as irreversible disability (Expanded Disability Status Scale grade maintained for ≥6 months).In the African descent group, the median time to reach Expanded Disability Status Scale 3 was 1 year shorter (1 year vs 2 years, p= 0.02), and to reach Expanded Disability Status Scale 6 was 2 years shorter (3 years vs 5 years, p= 0.01) than in the group of white patients. According to the Kaplan—Meier survival curves, patients of African descent reached every disability stage faster than white patients (p= 0.03, p = 0.04, and p = 0.03, respectively, for Expanded Di...Recent studies have suggested faster clinical progression and greater disability in multiple sclerosis patients of African descent. This study analysed the effect of ethnicity on progression and disability. Sixty-five patients with primary progressive multiple sclerosis were selected and classified as being of African descent or white. Time from onset of the disease until reaching Expanded Disability Status Scale grades 3, 6, and 8 was assessed, as well as irreversible disability (Expanded Disability Status Scale grade maintained for >or=6 months). In the African descent group, the median time to reach Expanded Disability Status Scale 3 was 1 year shorter (1 year vs 2 years, p= 0.02), and to reach Expanded Disability Status Scale 6 was 2 years shorter (3 years vs 5 years, p= 0.01) than in the group of white patients. According to the Kaplan-Meier survival curves, patients of African descent reached every disability stage faster than white patients (p= 0.03, p = 0.04, and p = 0.03, respectively, for Expanded Disability Status Scale grades 3, 6, and 8). As in United States and European patients of African descent, the more severe and faster progression of multiple sclerosis seen in Brazilian primary progressive multiple sclerosis patients of African descent suggests a possibly greater effect of ethnicity rather than environment on the progression of multiple sclerosis.
Immunology | 2014
Thais B. Ferreira; Joana Hygino; Priscila O. Barros; Bruna Teixeira; Taissa M. Kasahara; Ulisses C. Linhares; Lana Márcia F. Lopes; Claudia Cristina Ferreira Vasconcelos; Regina Maria Papais Alvarenga; Ana Cristina Wing; Regis M. Andrade; Arnaldo F.B. Andrade; Cleonice A.M. Bento
Interleukin‐6 (IL‐6) has been implicated in the induction of pathogenic IL‐17‐producing T cells in autoimmune diseases, and studies evaluating the role of this cytokine in T‐cell function in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) are lacking. Our objective was to evaluate the role of IL‐6 receptor (IL‐6R) signalling on in vitro functional status of T cells from patients with relapsing–remitting MS during clinical remission. Our results demonstrated that, even during the remission phase, activated T cells from patients produce higher levels of IL‐17, and this cytokine was positively correlated with disease severity, as determined by Expanded Disability Status Scale score. In the MS group, the blockade of IL‐6R signalling by anti‐IL‐6R monoclonal antibody reduced IL‐17 production and elevated IL‐10 release by activated CD4+ T cells, but it did not alter the production of these cytokines by activated CD8+ T cells. Blockade of IL‐6R signalling also reduced the ability of monocytes to up‐regulate T helper type 17 phenotype in patients with MS. Finally, both cell proliferation and IL‐17 release by CD4+ and, mainly, CD8+ T cells from patients with MS were less sensitive to hydrocortisone inhibition than control group. Interestingly, IL‐6R signalling blockade restored the ability of hydrocortisone to inhibit both T‐cell proliferation and IL‐17 production. Collectively, these results suggest that IL‐6 might be involved in MS pathogenesis by enhancing IL‐17 production and reducing corticoid inhibitory effects on activated T cells.
Journal of Neuroimmunology | 2016
Denise S.M. Medrado da Costa; Joana Hygino; Thais B. Ferreira; Taissa M. Kasahara; Priscila O. Barros; Clarice Monteiro; Aleida Oliveira; Felipe Tavares; Claudia Cristina Ferreira Vasconcelos; Regina Maria Papais Alvarenga; Cleonice A.M. Bento
Vitamin D deficiency is an environmental risk factor for MS, a Th17 cell-mediated autoimmune disease that results in demyelination in the CNS. Therefore, we aimed to evaluate the ability of in vitro 1,25(OH)2D in modulating different Th17 cell subsets in MS patients in remission phase. In the present study, the production of Th17-related cytokines (IL-1β, IL-6, IL-17, IL-22), as well as GM-CSF, was significantly higher in cell cultures from MS patients than in healthy subjects (HS). The 1,25(OH)2D reduced all pro-inflammatory cytokines essayed, mainly those released from HS cell cultures. The proportion of both IL-17+IFN-γ+ (CD4+ and CD8+) T cells and IL-17+IFN-γ-CD8+ T cells was positively related with neurological disorders, determined by EDSS score. The addition of 1,25(OH)2D reduced not only these pathogenic T cell subsets but elevated the percentage of IL-10-secreting conventional (FoxP3+CD25+CD127-CD4+) and non-conventional (IL-17+) regulatory-like T cells. Taken together, the results indicate that the active form of vitamin D should benefit MS patients by attenuating the percentage of pathogenic T cells. This effect could be direct and/or indirect, by enhancing classical and non-classical regulatory T cells.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Regina Maria Papais-Alvarenga; Claudia Cristina Ferreira Vasconcelos; Adriana Carrá; Ibis Soto de Castillo; Sara Florentin; Fernando Hamuy Diaz de Bedoya; Raul Mandler; Luiza Campanella de Siervi; Maria Lúcia Vellutini Pimentel; Marina Papais Alvarenga; Marcos Papais Alvarenga; Anderson Kuntz Grzesiuk; Ana Beatriz Calmon Nogueira da Gama Pereira; Antonio Pereira Gomes Neto; Carolina Velasquez; Carlos Soublette; Cynthia Veronica Fleitas; Denise Sisteroli Diniz; Elizabeth Armas; Elizabeth Batista; Freda Hernandez; Fernanda Ferreira Chaves da Costa Pereira; Heloise Helena Siqueira; Hideraldo Cabeça; Jose Javier Sanchez; Joseph Bruno Bidin Brooks; Marcus Vinicius Magno Goncalves; Maria Cristina Del Negro Barroso; Maria Elena Ravelo; Maria Carlota Castillo
The idiopathic inflammatory demyelinating disease (IIDD) spectrum has been investigated among different populations, and the results have indicated a low relative frequency of neuromyelitis optica (NMO) among multiple sclerosis (MS) cases in whites (1.2%-1.5%), increasing in Mestizos (8%) and Africans (15.4%-27.5%) living in areas of low MS prevalence. South America (SA) was colonized by Europeans from the Iberian Peninsula, and their miscegenation with natives and Africans slaves resulted in significant racial mixing. The current study analyzed the IIDD spectrum in SA after accounting for the ethnic heterogeneity of its population. A cross-sectional multicenter study was performed. Only individuals followed in 2011 with a confirmed diagnosis of IIDD using new diagnostic criteria were considered eligible. Patients’ demographic, clinical and laboratory data were collected. In all, 1,917 individuals from 22 MS centers were included (73.7% female, 63.0% white, 28.0% African, 7.0% Mestizo, and 0.2% Asian). The main disease categories and their associated frequencies were MS (76.9%), NMO (11.8%), other NMO syndromes (6.5%), CIS (3.5%), ADEM (1.0%), and acute encephalopathy (0.4%). Females predominated in all main categories. The white ethnicity also predominated, except in NMO. Except in ADEM, the disease onset occurred between 20 and 39 years old, early onset in 8.2% of all cases, and late onset occurred in 8.9%. The long-term morbidity after a mean disease time of 9.28±7.7 years was characterized by mild disability in all categories except in NMO, which was scored as moderate. Disease time among those with MS was positively correlated with the expanded disability status scale (EDSS) score (r=0.374; p=<0.001). This correlation was not observed in people with NMO or those with other NMO spectrum disorders (NMOSDs). Among patients with NMO, 83.2% showed a relapsing-remitting course, and 16.8% showed a monophasic course. The NMO-IgG antibody tested using indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) with a composite substrate of mouse tissues in 200 NMOSD cases was positive in people with NMO (95/162; 58.6%), longitudinally extensive transverse myelitis (10/30; 33.3%) and bilateral or recurrent optic neuritis (8/8; 100%). No association of NMO-IgG antibody positivity was found with gender, age at onset, ethnicity, early or late onset forms, disease course, or long-term severe disability. The relative frequency of NMO among relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS) + NMO cases in SA was 14.0%. Despite the high degree of miscegenation found in SA, MS affects three quarters of all patients with IIDD, mainly white young women who share similar clinical characteristics to those in Western populations in the northern hemisphere, with the exception of ethnicity; approximately one-third of all cases occur among non-white individuals. At the last assessment, the majority of RRMS patients showed mild disability, and the risk for secondary progression was significantly superior among those of African ethnicity. NMO comprises 11.8% of all IIDD cases in SA, affecting mostly young African-Brazilian women, evolving with a recurrent course and causing moderate or severe disability in both ethnic groups. The South-North gradient with increasing NMO and non-white individuals from Argentina, Paraguay, Brazil and Venezuela confirmed previous studies showing a higher frequency of NMO among non-white populations.
International Scholarly Research Notices | 2012
Claudia Cristina Ferreira Vasconcelos; Gutemberg Augusto Cruz dos Santos; Luiz Claudio Santos Thuler; Solange Maria Das Gr Camargo; Regina Maria Papais Alvarenga
Background. Studies on the clinical course of multiple sclerosis have indicated that certain initial clinical factors are predictive of disease progression. Regions with a low prevalence for disease, which have environmental and genetic factors that differ from areas of high prevalence, lack studies on the progressive course and disabling characteristics of the disease. Objective. To analyse the long-term evolution to the progressive phase of the relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis and its prognosis factors in mixed population. Methods. We performed a survival study and logistic regression to examine the influence of demographic and initial clinical factors on disease progression. Among 553 relapsing-remitting patients assisted at a Brazilian reference centre for multiple sclerosis, we reviewed the medical records of 150 patients who had a disease for ten or more years. Results. African ancestry was a factor that conferred more risk for secondary progression followed by age at the onset of the disease and the number of relapses in the year after diagnosis. A greater understanding of the influence of ancestry on prognosis serves to stimulate genetics and pharmacogenomics research and may clarify the poorly understood neurodegenerative progression of MS.
Immunology | 2016
Ana Cristina Wing; Joana Hygino; Thais B. Ferreira; Taissa M. Kasahara; Priscila O. Barros; Priscila M. Sacramento; Regis M. Andrade; Solange Camargo; Fernanda Rueda; Soniza Vieira Alves-Leon; Claudia Cristina Ferreira Vasconcelos; Regina Maria Papais Alvarenga; Cleonice A.M. Bento
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is thought to be an autoimmune disorder. It is believed that immunological events in the early stages have great impact on the disease course. Therefore, we aimed to evaluate the cytokine profile of myelin basic protein (MBP)‐specific T cells from MS patients in the early phase of the disease and correlate it to clinical parameters, as well as to the effect of in vitro corticoid treatment. Peripheral T cells from MS patients were stimulated with MBP with our without hydrocortisone for 5 days. The cytokines level were determined by ELISA. The number of active brain lesions was determined by MRI scans, and the neurological disabilities were assessed by Expanded Disability Status Scale scores. Our results demonstrated that MS‐derived T cells responded to MBP by producing high levels of T helper type 1 (Th1) and Th17 cytokines. Although the production of interleukin‐6 (IL‐6), granulocyte–macrophage colony‐stimulating factor, IL‐17 and IL‐22 was less sensitive to hydrocortisone inhibition, only IL‐17 and IL‐22 levels correlated with active brain lesions. The ability of hydrocortisone to inhibit IL‐17 and IL‐22 production by MBP‐specific CD4+ T cells was inversely related to the number of active brain lesions. Finally, the production of both cytokines was significantly higher in cell cultures from Afrodescendant patients and it was less sensitive to hydrocortisone inhibition. In summary, our data suggest that IL‐17‐ and IL‐22‐secreting CD4+ T cells resistant to corticoids are associated with radiological activity of the MS in early stages of the disease, mainly among Afrodescendant patients who, normally, have worse prognosis.
Clinical and Experimental Immunology | 2016
Priscila O. Barros; Tatiane Cassano; Joana Hygino; Thais B. Ferreira; Newton Centurião; Taissa M. Kasahara; Regis M. Andrade; Ulisses C. Linhares; Arnaldo F.B. Andrade; Claudia Cristina Ferreira Vasconcelos; Regina Maria Papais Alvarenga; Romain Marignier; Cleonice A.M. Bento
T helper type 17 (Th17) cytokines have been implicated in the pathogenesis of neuromyelitis optica (NMO). As humanized anti‐interleukin (IL)‐6R (tocilizumab) immunoglobulin (Ig)G has been used as disease‐modifying therapy for NMO, the objective of our study was to investigate the role of endogenous IL‐6 on NMO‐derived CD4+ T cell behaviour. High production of IL‐6, IL‐17 and IL‐21 by CD4+ T‐cells was detected in NMO patients. Further, IL‐21 and IL‐6 levels were related directly to the level of neurological disabilities. The addition of anti‐IL‐6R IgG not only reduced directly the production of these cytokines, but also almost abolished the ability of activated autologous monocytes in enhancing IL‐6, IL‐17 and IL‐21 release by CD4+ T cells. In contrast, the production of IL‐10 was amplified in those cell cultures. Further, anti‐IL‐6R monoclonal antibodies (mAb) also potentiated the ability of glucocorticoid in reducing Th17 cytokines. Finally, the in‐vivo and in‐vitro IL‐6 levels were significantly higher among those patients who experienced clinical relapse during 2‐year follow‐up. In summary, our results suggest a deleterious role of IL‐6 in NMO by favouring, at least in part, the expansion of corticoid‐resistant Th17 cells.
Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2015
Regina Maria Papais-Alvarenga; Fernanda Ferreira Chaves da Costa Pereira; Melina S. Bernardes; Marcos Papais-Alvarenga; Elizabeth Batista; Carmen Lúcia Antão Paiva; Claudia Miranda Santos; Claudia Cristina Ferreira Vasconcelos
OBJECTIVE To describe familial forms of demyelinating diseases from an MS referral center in Río de Janeiro State, Brazil. METHODS A descriptive, cross-sectional study was done to identify familial IIDD cases in Hospital da Lagoa, a public hospital where 75% of patients with IIDD who live in Rio de Janeiro state, located in the Southeast region of Brazil, are referred. The diagnoses of all consecutive patients followed in 2011 were reviewed to apply new diagnostic criteria (Wingerchuk et al., 2008). The diagnosis of IIDD was confirmed based on clinical history, neurological examination, MRI of the skull and spinal cord, CSF analysis and investigation of IgG NMO antibodies. The cases that had at least one other relative with IIDD were selected for the study. RESULTS Familial forms were found only in the multiple sclerosis (MS) and neuromyelitis optica syndrome (NMOSD) categories. 23 MS families were identified, 60.86% with first degree kinship. It has a Caucasian preponderance, 90% of whom were white. The frequency of early onset was 15% and 20% of the MSf cases have progressive primary course. CONCLUSION The frequency of familial cases of IIDD was 6.12% among MS patients and 2.8% in NMO spectrum syndromes.
Multiple sclerosis and related disorders | 2016
Claudia Cristina Ferreira Vasconcelos; Juliana Calvet Kallenbach Aurenção; Luiz Claudio Santos Thuler; Solange Camargo; Marcos Papais Alvarenga; Regina Maria Papais Alvarenga
BACKGROUND Predicting the long-term prognosis of patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) remains an uncertain and difficult task, with most data having been obtained exclusively from Caucasian cohorts. OBJECTIVE To investigate clinical prognostic factors in a Brazilian mixed-race cohort. METHODS Demographic, clinical and therapeutic factors were investigated in 303 patients with relapsing-remitting MS in relation to the following outcomes: time until reaching Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) 3 and EDSS 6, and until secondary progression. RESULTS Benign course was significantly more frequent among Caucasians when compared to Afrodescendants. Patients with a malignant course had more than one relapse in the first year of the disease and reached EDSS 3 faster if treatment was not started. In the multivariate analysis, the following factors were associated with a significantly shorter time until the established outcomes: male gender, being of African descent, non-recovery after the first relapse, two or more relapses during the first year, a short interval between initial relapses, initial polysymptomatic presentation of pyramidal and cerebellar dysfunction and no treatment prior to reaching EDSS 3. CONCLUSIONS Being of African descent was found to be an unfavorable factor for all outcomes, reinforcing the need to take ethnicity into consideration when defining treatment, particularly in mixed MS populations.