About this Research Topic
Clinical trials have, to date, failed to produce a disease-modifying treatment for Sjögren’s syndrome. This is due in part to the heterogeneity of the patient populations and our current inability to select patients for trial inclusion with reversible glandular dysfunction as required for measures of efficacy. Many of the trial therapeutics were chosen due to their efficacy in other autoimmune diseases, rather than being based on strong experimental evidence that they would be relevant to unique Sjögren’s syndrome disease processes. This clearly demonstrates the need to better define the pathogenic mechanisms of this disease as well as the development of tailored composite outcome parameters.
The aim of the current Research Topic is to serve as a platform for Sjögren’s syndrome researchers to collectively present recent work that advances our understanding of this complex disease. It will serve to address the underlying drivers and mechanisms of immune dysregulation, the identification of novel biomarkers, autoantibody specificities and potential therapeutic targets specific to the pathogenesis of Sjögren’s syndrome and to highlight promising new treatments.
We invite contributions to this article collection exploring Sjögren’s syndrome in the form of General Commentary, Original Research, Review/Mini Review, Case Report, Perspective, Clinical Trial, Study Protocol, Classification and Methods articles. We welcome manuscripts related to, but not limited to:
• Molecular and Cellular Mechanisms
• Metabolic Studies
• Autoantibodies and Autoantigens
• Genetic and Epigenetic Studies
• Mechanisms for Sexual Dimorphism
• Environmental Influences
• Epithelial and Immune Cell Pathways
• New Therapies and Treatments
• Outcome parameters
Dr. Baer is the site PI for a clinical trial investigating treatments related to Sjogren's Syndrome, in conjunction with Viela Bio. The other Topic Editors declare no competing interests with relation to the topic theme.
Keywords: Sjögren’s syndrome, Pathogenesis, genetics, biomarkers, autoantibodies, lymphoma, treatments and therapies, outcome measures
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.