Review
Gender differences in autoimmune disease

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.yfrne.2014.04.004Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Gender differences that exist in autoimmunity follow a female bias.

  • Differences in immune response may underlie gender bias in autoimmune disease.

  • Factors linked with reproduction may underlie gender bias in autoimmune disease.

  • External factors might influence susceptibility to autoimmune disease.

  • Studies in autoimmunity should be stratified according to gender.

Abstract

Autoimmune diseases are a range of diseases in which the immune response to self-antigens results in damage or dysfunction of tissues. Autoimmune diseases can be systemic or can affect specific organs or body systems. For most autoimmune diseases there is a clear sex difference in prevalence, whereby females are generally more frequently affected than males. In this review, we consider gender differences in systemic and organ-specific autoimmune diseases, and we summarize human data that outlines the prevalence of common autoimmune diseases specific to adult males and females in countries commonly surveyed. We discuss possible mechanisms for sex specific differences including gender differences in immune response and organ vulnerability, reproductive capacity including pregnancy, sex hormones, genetic predisposition, parental inheritance, and epigenetics. Evidence demonstrates that gender has a significant influence on the development of autoimmune disease. Thus, considerations of gender should be at the forefront of all studies that attempt to define mechanisms that underpin autoimmune disease.

Keywords

Autoimmunity
Gender
Sex differences
Immune system

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1

Authors contributed equally.