Systemic Lupus Erythematosus: Multisystem Autoimmune Disease

Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a chronic autoimmune disease of inflammatory and multisystem character, characterized by the production of autoantibodies against nuclear components — especially anti-dsDNA and anti-Sm — and deposition of immune complexes in target tissues. It predominantly affects women of childbearing age (9:1 ratio), with a peak between 15 and 45 years of age, and may compromise virtually any organ or system.

SLE is characterized by a fluctuating course with periods of remission and flares. The disease burden is amplified by chronic symptoms that persist even outside of flares and that often do not respond adequately to conventional treatment:

53–80%
CLINICALLY SIGNIFICANT FATIGUE
The most prevalent symptom and the one most associated with worsening quality of life
95%
ARTHRALGIA/ARTHRITIS OVER THE COURSE OF DISEASE
The most frequent joint manifestation in SLE
2.8 pts
SLEDAI REDUCTION WITH ACUPUNCTURE
Lupus 2020 meta-analysis (8 RCTs) — complement to conventional treatment
9:1
FEMALE:MALE RATIO
Sex hormones are important co-factors in the pathogenesis of SLE

Specific Role of Acupuncture in SLE

Acupuncture does not replace immunosuppressants (HCQ, prednisone, mycophenolate) in the treatment of SLE — especially in severe manifestations such as nephritis, neurolupus, or pericarditis. Its role is the symptomatic management of arthralgia, fatigue, and quality of life as a complement to established rheumatologic treatment, and to assist in the gradual reduction of the corticosteroid dose in stable patients.

Conventional Treatment of SLE

Treatment of SLE is stratified by target organ and flare severity, with hydroxychloroquine as the universal foundation and immunosuppressants added as indicated.

THERAPEUTIC STRATEGY IN SLE BY SEVERITY

MANIFESTATIONMAIN TREATMENTRELEVANT LIMITATION
Mild SLE (arthralgia, rash)HCQ 400 mg/day ± NSAIDHCQ: retinal risk (>5 years); NSAIDs: renal, GI
Moderate SLE (arthritis, serositis)Prednisone 0.5 mg/kg + HCQCorticosteroid: osteoporosis, Cushing, infection; difficult tapering
Lupus nephritis (Class III-IV)Pulse therapy + mycophenolate or cyclophosphamideProfound immunosuppression; infections; infertility
Refractory / severe manifestationsBelimumab (anti-BLyS), voclosporin, anifrolumabHigh cost; not approved for severe nephritis
Fatigue and quality of lifeNo therapy specifically approvedReal therapeutic gap — domain of acupuncture

Mechanisms of Action in SLE

The mechanisms of acupuncture are especially relevant for the chronic symptoms of SLE — with documented action on the cytokine profile and on the neuroendocrine axis.

Mechanisms of Action in SLE

  1. 1. Immunomodulation — Treg/Th17 Rebalancing

    In SLE, there is hyperactivation of Th17 cells (IL-17 producers) and dysfunction of Treg cells (regulatory, TGF-β producers). Experimental studies with acupuncture at ST-36 + LI-11 + SP-6 describe relative reductions in IL-6 and IL-17 and an increase in TGF-β (Journal of Autoimmunity, 2021), suggesting rebalancing of the Th17/Treg balance without global immunological suppression — preliminary findings that need confirmation in larger clinical trials.

  2. 2. Fatigue — HPA Axis and Mitochondria

    Fatigue in SLE has an inflammatory component (IL-6, TNF-α), an endocrine component (post-corticosteroid adrenal dysfunction), and a mitochondrial component. ST-36 + SP-6 + GV-20 reduce IL-6 and improve muscle mitochondrial function. The role on the HPA axis is especially relevant in patients who are tapering corticosteroids — acupuncture activates endogenous cortisol via ACTH, smoothing the adrenal "drop".

  3. 3. Arthralgia — Opioid and Serotonergic Analgesia

    LI-4 + LR-3 (Four Gates) activate the descending inhibitory pain pathways. SP-10 (point of blood) is especially relevant in TCM for migratory arthralgia — the typical pattern in SLE. EA at 2 Hz at SP-10 + ST-34 raises local β-endorphins, reducing joint allodynia.

  4. 4. Assistance in Corticosteroid Tapering

    GV-14 + GV-20 + BL-23 activate the endogenous hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, reducing the symptoms of "relative withdrawal" of the corticosteroid (fatigue, pain, weakness) during gradual tapering of prednisone. This is one of the most relevant — and specific — clinical applications of acupuncture in SLE.

Anti-Inflammatory Points

  • ST-36 — immunomodulation, HPA axis
  • LI-11 — traditionally indicated in "heat/dampness" patterns (TCM); modern reading: point with evidence of anti-inflammatory effect
  • SP-6 — in TCM, crossing point of the "yin" with an immune role; in modern reading, neuroimmunoendocrine modulation
  • SP-10 — traditionally associated with "blood" and migratory arthralgia (TCM)
  • BL-17 — influential point of "blood" (TCM); modern reading: paravertebral modulation

For Fatigue

  • GV-20 — central modulation, HPA axis
  • BL-23 — Back-Shu point of the Kidney (TCM); modern reading: lumbar autonomic modulation
  • KI-3 — source point of the Kidney meridian; in modern reading, acts via autonomic and endocrine modulation
  • GV-4 — traditional point associated with vitality; modern reading: lumbar paravertebral stimulation

For Arthralgia

  • LI-4 — systemic analgesia via descending pathways
  • LR-3 — in TCM, related to "stagnant Qi"; modern reading: modulation of pain and sympathetic tone
  • • Local points: affected joint
  • • EA at 2 Hz on the joints

Scientific Evidence

The evidence for acupuncture in SLE has grown in recent years, with emphasis on the study of cytokines as objective biomarkers of response.

CLINICAL RESULTS — LUPUS 2020 META-ANALYSIS (8 RCTS, N=562)

OUTCOMERESULTQUALITY OF EVIDENCE
SLEDAI (disease activity)−2.8 pts (95% CI −3.4 to −2.2)Moderate
Arthralgia VAS−2.4 ptsModerate
FACIT-Fatigue−3.6 pts (improvement)Moderate
Serum IL-6−38%Low-Moderate
Anti-dsDNANo significant changeModerate — important for safety
Quality of life (SF-36)+8.4 pts physical component; +6.2 mentalModerate

Clinical Protocol in SLE

Treatment Guidelines

  1. Initial Assessment — Coordination with the Rheumatologist

    Current SLEDAI, immunosuppressants in use, leukocyte count (leukopenia <2,000/µL: caution), active nephritis (relative contraindication). Formal communication with the rheumatologist. Photosensitivity: do not apply acupuncture in regions with active eruption.

  2. Specific Contraindications in SLE

    DO NOT perform acupuncture during: active renal flare (active nephritis), neurolupus with active seizure or psychosis, severe thrombocytopenia (<30,000/µL — risk of hematoma). Wait for stabilization with the rheumatologist before starting.

  3. Treatment Phase

    One to two sessions/week. Protocol: ST-36 + SP-6 + LI-11 (immunomodulation), SP-10 + BL-17 (arthralgia), GV-20 + BL-23 (fatigue), KI-3 + GV-4 (complementary symptomatic support, with no pharmacologic renal role). No EA in patients with moderate thrombocytopenia (30,000–50,000/µL). Reassess SLEDAI monthly with the rheumatologist; immunosuppressant adjustment is exclusively the rheumatologist's decision.

When to Seek Medical Acupuncture in SLE

Priority Indications

  • • Persistent fatigue in controlled SLE (SLEDAI <6)
  • • Residual arthralgia after immunosuppressant optimization
  • • Assistance in gradual prednisone tapering
  • • SLE with overlapping fibromyalgia syndrome
  • • Sleep disorders associated with SLE
  • • Anxiety/depression as comorbidities of chronic SLE

Absolute Contraindications

  • • Active renal flare (lupus nephritis classes III–IV)
  • • Active neurolupus (seizure, psychosis)
  • • Severe thrombocytopenia <30,000/µL
  • • Severe leukopenia <1,000 neutrophils/µL
  • • Serositis with hemorrhagic effusion

Frequently Asked Questions

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS · 04

Frequently Asked Questions

There are no documented reports of acupuncture triggering an SLE flare in the clinical studies conducted. Acupuncture does not stimulate antibody production nor alter anti-dsDNA titers — the main marker of immunological activity. The correct protocol avoids: UV light at the points (use cloths), needles in active erythema, and sessions during intercurrent infections (which can indeed trigger flares).

It depends on the degree. With platelets >50,000/µL, acupuncture with fine needles is generally safe (risks similar to a blood draw). With platelets between 30,000–50,000/µL, an adapted technique is used: smaller needles (0.16mm), no intense manipulation, avoiding points over superficial vessels. Below 30,000/µL, we contraindicate due to risk of intramuscular hematoma. Always in dialogue with the rheumatologist.

There are no known pharmacological interactions between acupuncture and any immunosuppressant used in SLE — including HCQ, prednisone, mycophenolate, azathioprine, or belimumab. The precaution in immunosuppressed patients is sanitary: absolute sterility of needles and rigorous skin antisepsis.

Photosensitivity itself does not contraindicate acupuncture. However, we do not apply acupuncture over áreas of active erythema (malar rash, discoid lesion). The acupuncture office does not expose the patient to UV — the risk is zero in that setting. In patients with severe photosensitivity, exposed skin is covered during sessions to avoid accidental exposure.

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