Introduction And Epidemiology

  • Chronic, inflammatory autoimmune disease.
  • Characterized by progressive lymphocytic and plasma cell infiltration of exocrine glands.
  • Affects primarily salivary and lacrimal glands.
  • Rare in children.
  • Mean age at diagnosis spans 9 to 10 years.
  • Demonstrates strong female predominance approaching 75%.
  • Classified as primary (isolated sicca complex) or secondary.
  • Secondary disease occurs in association with systemic lupus erythematosus, scleroderma, or mixed connective tissue disease.

Etiology And Pathogenesis

  • Results from complex interaction of genetic predisposition and potential infectious triggers.
  • Autoantibodies (Anti-Ro/SSA, Anti-La/SSB) produced via B-cell activation.
  • Features marked overproduction of interferons.
  • Lymphocytes and plasma cells infiltrate salivary glands.
  • Infiltration forms distinct periductal and periacinar foci.
  • Foci become confluent, eventually replacing normal epithelial glandular structure.
  • Regulated by apoptosis genes influencing chronicity of lymphocytic infiltration.

Clinical Manifestations

Glandular Features

  • Recurrent parotid gland enlargement or parotitis represents the most common presentation in children (>70%).
  • Painful or painless parotid swelling observed.
  • Classic sicca symptoms include dry eyes (keratoconjunctivitis sicca) and dry mouth (xerostomia).
  • Sicca symptoms often less prominent or underreported in pediatric populations compared to adults.
  • Widespread dental caries common secondary to xerostomia.
  • Other exocrine features include decreased sense of smell and hoarseness.

Extraglandular And Systemic Features

  • Systemic symptoms more prevalent in children than adults.
  • Fever and lymphadenopathy occur in approximately 8% of cases.
  • Polyarthritis or arthralgia noted in 18% of pediatric patients.
  • Renal disease typically manifests as distal renal tubular acidosis or tubulointerstitial nephritis.
  • Renal tubular acidosis presents clinically with polyuria, polydipsia, and hypokalemic paralysis.
  • Medullary nephrocalcinosis visible on renal ultrasound.
  • Pulmonary involvement includes diffuse interstitial lymphocytosis or interstitial lung disease.
  • Neurological features encompass sensory/autonomic neuropathy and central nervous system involvement.
  • Hematologic features include autoimmune hemolytic anemia and leukopenia.

Diagnostic Evaluation

Proposed Pediatric Classification Criteria

  • Diagnosis requires minimum 4 of 12 proposed items.
DomainSpecific Criteria
Clinical SymptomsRecurrent parotitis, recurrent nonallergic/noninfectious conjunctivitis, recurrent vaginitis, systemic features (fever, arthralgia, hypokalemic paralysis, abdominal pain).
Objective FindingsOcular dryness (Schirmer test), abnormal sialography, elevated serum amylase, leukopenia/elevated ESR, polyclonal hyperimmunoglobulinemia, renal tubular acidosis.
SerologyAnti-SSA (Ro), Anti-SSB (La), high titer ANA (speckled pattern), positive Rheumatoid Factor.
HistopathologyLymphocytic infiltration of salivary glands or other organs.

Laboratory And Immunological Profile

  • Markedly raised polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia constitutes an important diagnostic marker.
  • Complete blood count reveals leukopenia or anemia.
  • Antinuclear antibody (ANA) positive in 40-70% of cases, typically exhibiting speckled pattern.
  • Rheumatoid factor positive in up to 67% of cases.
  • Specific autoantibodies include Anti-SSA (Ro) and Anti-SSB (La).

Specific Diagnostic Tests

  • Schirmer test quantifies tear production. Utilizes Whatman filter paper No. 41 (5 mm x 35 mm). Wetting ≤5 mm in 5 minutes indicates positive result.
  • Ocular surface damage detected via special dyes (fluorescein, Lissamine green).
  • Salivary gland scintigraphy demonstrates reduced or delayed uptake.
  • Salivary gland ultrasonography reveals characteristic cystic lesions.

Histopathology

  • Minor salivary gland (labial) biopsy serves as gold standard.
  • Pathological hallmark requires demonstration of focal lymphocytic sialadenitis.
  • Focus score >1 per 4 mm² area (defined as cluster of >50 lymphocytes) confirms diagnosis.
  • Children typically exhibit normal minor salivary gland biopsies but abnormal parotid biopsies.

Differential Diagnosis

  • Juvenile recurrent parotitis: Features intermittent unilateral swelling, younger age onset (3-6 years), male predominance, and lacks focal lymphocytic infiltrates on biopsy.
  • Infectious parotitis: Includes mumps, Epstein-Barr virus, cytomegalovirus, and HIV.
  • Structural/Traumatic: Polycystic parotid disease, salivary duct calculi, local trauma.
  • Other etiologies: Sarcoidosis, eating disorders, tumors.
  • Sicca symptoms, specific autoantibodies, and rash remain absent in these differential conditions.

Management Strategies

  • Requires tailored multidisciplinary intervention.
  • Symptomatic Relief: Artificial tears, parotid massage, oral lozenges, and adequate hydration.
  • Dental Care: Regular dental hygiene checks mandatory to prevent caries.
  • Secretagogues: Pilocarpine hydrochloride utilized to increase salivary flow.
  • Renal Management: Urinary alkalinizing agents indicated for renal tubular acidosis.
  • Pharmacotherapy: Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and hydroxychloroquine utilized for mild systemic symptoms.
  • Corticosteroids: Administered for moderate systemic involvement.
  • Immunosuppressants: Methotrexate or etanercept indicated for arthritis. Azathioprine utilized for progressive disease.
  • Severe Disease: Cyclophosphamide, cyclosporine, or Rituximab reserved for life-threatening complications or severe visceral involvement, such as interstitial lung disease.

Complications And Prognosis

  • Disease typically follows indolent, slowly progressive course.
  • Overall 10-year survival rate exceeds 90% in pediatric patients.
  • Diminished salivary flow persists indefinitely.
  • Corneal damage represents significant morbidity if keratoconjunctivitis sicca remains untreated.
  • Carries increased risk for mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma, although incidence is significantly lower in children compared to adults.
  • Maternal Sjögren syndrome strongly associated with risk of neonatal lupus and congenital heart block in offspring due to transplacental transfer of Anti-Ro/La antibodies.