Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a complex, multisystemic, and highly heterogeneous autoimmune disease. Its diagnosis and clinical monitoring have traditionally been challenging due to the variability of symptoms, fluctuating activity, and the absence of single, universal biomarkers—challenges that flow cytometry is increasingly helping to overcome.
In this context, flow cytometry emerges as a fundamental tool to unravel the cellular behaviour of the immune system in real time, allowing not only to characterise specific immune subpopulations, but also to monitor the patient’s evolution and response to treatment.
Flow cytometry allows the analysis of individual immune cells based on their physical characteristics (such as size and granularity) and molecular characteristics (presence of surface or intracellular proteins). This is especially relevant in SLE, where profound alterations occur in multiple components of the immune system.
These cells are a major source of type I interferon, key in the pathophysiology of SLE. Their altered frequency and activation can be measured by cytometry as an indicator of inflammatory activity.
One of the clinical challenges in SLE is to differentiate between real immune activity and chronic damage or non-inflammatory symptoms. Flow cytometry allows:
In recent studies, combinations of activated B subpopulations + PD-1 expression in T cells have shown predictive capacity of imminent relapses.
Flow cytometry is not only useful in clinical practice. It is also essential in:
Lupus does not only manifest itself in flares or autoantibody tests. Its true dynamics occur at the cellular level, in an overactive, dysfunctional and poorly regulated immune system.
At Immunostep we work to put this technology at the service of researchers and clinicians fighting autoimmune diseases like lupus Because every cell counts. And every piece of information, properly interpreted, can change the course of a disease.