We reviewed the literature concerning pathogenesis, clinical features, diagnosis and treatment of interstitial lung disease
(ILD) in patients with systemic sclerosis (SSc). ILD is detectable in approximately 70% of patients at autopsy. Nonspecific
interstitial pneumonia (NSIP) is the most common pathologic finding. The earliest phase of ILD in SSc is characterized by
microvascular injury and alveolitis. Endothelial lesions, activation of coagulation proteases, especially thrombin, fibroblast
proliferation, and differentiation of normal lung fibroblasts to a myofibroblasts phenotype are hallmarks of ILD in SSc. Diagnostic
procedures used to detect ILD are chest X-ray, high-resolution computed tomography, bronchoalveolar lavage, lung function
tests, and sometimes thoracoscopic lung biopsy. Novel and potentially useful methods to diagnose ILD in SSc are induced sputum
and technetium-labeled diethylenetriamine pentaacetate (
99mTC-DTPA) clearance time. Cyclophosphamide seems to be relatively effective to treat ILD in the earliest phase, but the effects
of other immunosuppressive drugs on the lungs are less convincing.
Keywords Systemic sclerosis - Interstitial lung disease - Pathogenesis - Diagnosis Therapy