This cohort study measured soluble CD27 (sCD27) in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and blood from an Immunopsychiatry Cohort of patients with severe psychiatric disorders (n=115), patients with multiple sclerosis (n=37), and age-matched surgical controls (n=154). The primary exposure was sCD27 level, and the primary outcome was its association with comorbid autoimmune disease.
In the Immunopsychiatry Cohort, 23% of patients were CSF sCD27 positive and 15% were blood sCD27 positive. In MS patients, 88% were CSF sCD27 positive and 22% were blood sCD27 positive. CSF-sCD27 positivity in psychiatric patients was associated with comorbid autoimmune disease (X2=4.847, p=0.028) and with autoimmune disease activity (OR=5.14, p=0.029). Combining CSF and/or blood sCD27 positivity showed a stronger association with autoimmune disease (X2=8.559, p=0.003). CSF-sCD27 positivity was also associated with pleocytosis, CSF-Total-tau, and CSF-NfL.
No safety or tolerability data were reported. Key limitations include the observational cohort design, lack of reported follow-up, and unreported setting and funding. The practice relevance is that sCD27 is a candidate marker for identifying psychiatric patients with comorbid autoimmune disease, particularly when analyzing both CSF and blood to improve sensitivity and specificity. However, the evidence shows associations, not causation, and certainty is limited by the study design.
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T-cell activation may be contributing to severe psychiatric disorders. Soluble CD27 (sCD27) - a marker for T-cell activation and disease activity in several autoimmune diseases - was evaluated as a tool for distinguishing T-cell activity in selected patients with severe psychiatric disorders, multiple sclerosis (MS), and controls. We hypothesise that elevated sCD27 levels will be associated with comorbid autoimmune disease (AID). sCD27 was measured in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and blood from a population enriched for suspected immunological comorbidity: the Immunopsychiatry Cohort (IP; n=115) and patients with MS (n=37), where levels in both groups were higher when compared with age matched controls undergoing surgery (n=154). Positive sCD27 (sCD27+), was defined as values >97.5% of controls. In IP, 23% were CSF sCD27+ and 15% blood sCD27+, compared to patients with MS where 88% were CSF sCD27+ and 22% were blood sCD27+. CSF-sCD27+ was confirmed as a sensitive marker for MS. In IP, CSF-sCD27+ was associated with comorbid AID (X2=4.847, p =0.028;) and AID disease activity (OR=5.14, p=0.029). Associations with AID were stronger when CSF and/or blood sCD27+ were combined (X2=8.559, p=0.003). CSF-sCD27+ in IP was also associated with pleocytosis, CSF-Total-tau, and CSF-NfL. In patients with severe psychiatric disorders, the sCD27+ cases were more likely to have comorbid AID and established markers for neuroinflammation in CSF. Combining analyses of CSF and blood improved sensitivity and specificity for AID suggesting compartmentalized T-cell activation. Psychiatric symptoms may precede somatic symptoms - or be the prominent symptom - of AID and sCD27 is a candidate marker for identification of this subgroup.