학술논문

Serological abnormalities that predict progression to systemic autoimmune rheumatic diseases in antinuclear antibody-positive individuals.
Document Type
article
Source
Rheumatology. 61(3)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Autoimmune Disease
Prevention
Clinical Research
Detection
screening and diagnosis
4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies
Aetiology
4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Inflammatory and immune system
Adult
Antibodies
Antinuclear
Autoimmune Diseases
Disease Progression
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Predictive Value of Tests
Rheumatic Diseases
Young Adult
antinuclear antibodies
microarray analysis
SLE
rheumatic diseases
Ro52 antigen
Immunology
Public Health and Health Services
Arthritis & Rheumatology
Clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
ObjectiveWe investigated the autoantibody (autoAb) profiles in ANA+ individuals lacking systemic autoimmune rheumatic disease (SARD) and early SARD patients to determine the key differences between these groups and identify factors that are associated with an increased risk of symptomatic progression within the next 2 years in ANA+ individuals.MethodsUsing custom antigen (Ag) microarrays, 144 IgM and IgG autoAbs were surveyed in 84 asymptomatic and 123 symptomatic (48 UCTD and 75 SARD patients) ANA+ individuals. AutoAbs were compared in ANA+ individuals lacking a SARD diagnosis with ≥2 years follow-up (n = 52), including all those who demonstrated progression (n = 14) during this period, with changes over time assessed in a representative subset.ResultsWe show that ANA+ individuals have autoAb to many self-Ags that are not being captured by current screening techniques and very high levels of these autoAbs are predominantly restricted to early SARD patients, with SLE patients displaying reactivity to many more autoAgs than the other groups. In general, the symptoms that developed in progressors mirrored those seen in SARD patients with similar patterns of autoAbs. Only anti-Ro52 Abs were found to predict progression (positive predictive value 46%, negative predictive value 89%). Surprisingly, over 2 years of follow-up the levels of autoAbs remained remarkably stable regardless of whether individuals progressed or not.ConclusionOur findings strongly argue that development of assays with an expanded set of auto-Ags and enhanced dynamic range would improve the diagnostic and prognostic ability of autoAb testing.