CASE REPORTS
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The combination of complement deficiency and cigarette smoking as risk factor for cutaneous lupus erythematosus in men; a focus on combined C2/C4 deficiency.

BACKGROUND: Although deficiencies in the early components of the complement system were among the first identified genetic risk factors for systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), only a few studies addressed their significance in patients with cutaneous LE (CLE). Among environmental factors, it was postulated that cigarette smoking might intervene in the pathogenesis of LE.

OBJECTIVES: To describe the clinical and biological features of patients with CLE and a complement deficiency. A secondary objective was to assess cigarette smoking in patients with CLE.

PATIENTS AND METHODS: A retrospective study including all patients diagnosed as having LE between 1995 and 2003 in the Dermatology Department of Strasbourg University Hospital. Patient charts were reviewed and those patients in whom a C4 and/or C2 deficiency was diagnosed were included. Two patients with a combined C2/C4 deficiency were analysed in detail.

RESULTS: There were 48 females and 37 males (F/M ratio = 1.3), with a mean age of 41 years at diagnosis; 73% of the patients had chronic LE and 27% subacute CLE. Among 32 screened patients, 24 patients with a mean age of 36 years had a complement deficiency; 17 had a C4A deficiency, five a C4B deficiency and two a combined C4A/C2 deficiency. A high proportion (58%) of these patients was male; 82% of the patients were smokers. This was especially true in males: 94% were smokers compared with 69% of females.

CONCLUSIONS: Partial deficiency of C4, C2 or C4 and C2 is a common finding in patients with CLE. Most male patients with CLE are smokers. It is thus suggested that the combination of cigarette smoking and complement deficiency could be a risk factor for LE in men.

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