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Antinuclear antibody as entry criterion for classification of systemic lupus erythematosus: pitfalls and opportunities
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  1. Philippe Willems1,
  2. Ellen De Langhe2,
  3. René Westhovens3,
  4. Steven Vanderschueren4,
  5. Daniel Blockmans5,
  6. Xavier Bossuyt6
  1. 1 Laboratory Medicine, University Hospitals Leuven, Leuven, Flanders, Belgium
  2. 2 Rheumatology, University Hospitals Leuven, Leuven, Flanders, Belgium
  3. 3 Rheumatology, University Hospitals Leuven, Leuven, Belgium
  4. 4 General internal medicine, University Hospitals Leuven, Leuven, Belgium
  5. 5 General internal medicine, University Hospitals Leuven, Leuven, Belgium
  6. 6 Laboratory Medicine, University Hospitals Leuven, Leuven, Belgium
  1. Correspondence to Dr Xavier Bossuyt, University Hospitals Leuven, Leuven, 3000, Belgium; xavier.bossuyt{at}uzleuven.be

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Antinuclear antibodies (ANAs) are helpful to support the diagnosis of ANA-associated systemic rheumatic diseases (AASRD). Pisetsky et al recently reported on the variability of ANA detection, with differences observed between assay platforms (indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) vs solid phase) and kits in patients with established systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE).1 Variation of ANA detection has also been shown for automated IIF systems.2 Initiatives to better understand the variability of ANA tests are needed.3 Pisetsky et al 1 also pointed out that ANA negativity occurs in established SLE, thereby complicating screening for patients for clinical trials.1 Yet, an Italian study reported a high sensitivity of ANA for established SLE.4

Testing for ANAs is complex and accurate interpretation of test results might be difficult. A task force of the European League Against Rheumatism (EULAR) has recently been installed that will address these issues in conjunction with other international committees.5 In this context and of particular interest is that new criteria for the classification of patients with SLE are being developed under the umbrellas of the EULAR and the American College of Rheumatology (ACR).6 In these criteria, a history of ANAs ≥1:80 by HEp-2 IIF will be the entry criterion (ie, must be present to be considered for classification as SLE).6 The ≥1:80 cut-off was chosen in order to ensure high sensitivity.6

We evaluated the performance of ANA for SLE diagnosis on 9851 unique consecutive patients tested for ANA (for description of the population, see Willems et al 7). All patients were tested for ANA by IIF (HEp-2000; ImmunoConcepts) and by solid-phase assay (EliA CTD screen; Thermo Fisher).7 The clinical diagnosis was documented for 2475 patients, including (1) all patients who tested positive for IIF (cut-off 1:80) and/or CTD screen (cut-off ratio 0.7) and (2) a selection of 500 patients who tested double negative (including 150 patients with IIF titre 1:40).7 This allowed us to calculate the positive predictive value (PPV) of IIF for SLE. As all samples were also tested by CTD screen, we could document SLE cases that tested negative by IIF but positive by CTD screen. Patients with SLE were divided into newly diagnosed SLE, established SLE and patients who did not fulfil the classification criteria.8

The titre-specific PPV of IIF 1:80 for SLE fulfilling the ACR classification criteria8 was 1%, which is low and comparable with the estimated prevalence of SLE in the entire population (0.9%). The estimated likelihood ratio (LR) associated with IIF 1:80 was 1.16, indicating almost no difference in pretest to post-test probability. Of note, IIF 1:80 accounted for 37% of all positive ANA IIF results. The titre-specific PPV for SLE increased with increasing antibody levels and was 3.5%, 5.8%, 8.7%, 11.8% and 16.8% for, respectively, IIF titre 1:160, 1:320, 1:640, ≥1:1280 and reactivity to overexpressed SSA on the HEp-2000 substrate. The estimated titre-specific LRs were, respectively, 4.1, 7.0, 10.8, 14.7 and 21.8. Newly diagnosed patients with SLE had IIF results ≥1:160, whereas 10% (8/83) of patients with established SLE were IIF negative. Of note, six of the eight IIF-negative patients with established SLE tested positive with CTD screen.

ANAs are also associated with cutaneous lupus, mixed connective tissue disease (MCTD), systemic sclerosis (SSc), Sjögren’s syndrome (SS) and idiopathic inflammatory myopathy (IIM). The PPV for AASRD (SLE, SSc, SS, IIM, MCTD and cutaneous lupus) was 2%, 6.8%, 15%, 31.7%, 47.6% and 50% for, respectively, IIF 1:80, 1:160, 1:320, 1:640, ≥1:1280 and reactivity to the overexpressed SSA. Thus, SLE has to be distinguished from other AASRDs.

The PPV for SLE of IIF 1:80 combined with a positive CTD screen was 5.6% (estimated LR: 6.8) compared with 1% for IIF 1:80 alone. It was 0.4% for IIF 1:80 combined with a negative CTD screen (estimated LR: 0.4). Similar findings (ie, increased PPV for double positivity and decreased PPV for singly positivity) were found when CTD screen was combined with higher IIF titres (see table 1 for an overview of the PPVs). For AASRD, an analogous increase in PPV was observed when IIF was combined with solid phase assay (see table 1 and Willems et al 7).

Table 1

Clinical diagnoses in patients tested for antinuclear antibodies (ANAs)

Taken together, we found (1) that the titre-specific PPV of low-titre ANA for SLE is low, (2) that the PPV for SLE increases with increasing IIF titre and (3) that combining IIF with solid-phase assay adds value.

This implies that a low-positive ANA IIF titre (1:80) does not significantly increase the post-test probability for SLE (as the PPV is comparable with the PPV for the entire population tested for ANA). Thus, in those cases, classification will have to rely on clinical manifestations/characteristics. The downsides of the low PPV include potential false diagnoses and inappropriate treatment by clinicians not familiar with rheumatic diseases or inappropriate referrals to rheumatologists. It is important that clinicians are acquainted with the clinical manifestations/characteristics of SLE.

It is valuable to distinguish a low positive IIF titre (1:80) from a negative IIF result, as a negative result is useful to exclude SLE, whereas a low-positive result is not. It is also valuable to distinguish a low-positive IIF titre from a high-positive IIF titre, as a high titre has a higher PPV for SLE than a low titre. Therefore, an IIF result should not be seen as a dichotomous result (positive vs negative) but as a result with titre-specific LRs for disease. A potential danger of the new classification criteria is that clinicians not familiar with systemic rheumatic diseases will overestimate the PPV of a low-positive IIF ANA, as a cut-off of 1:80 is explicitly mentioned.

New classification criteria should recognise the high (but not absolute) negative predictive value of IIF and also that a low-positive IIF ANA has a lower PPV than a high-positive IIF ANA. Different weights could be assigned to an IIF result depending on the level of positivity. Furthermore, combining IIF with solid-phase assay can help to better stratify patients, especially in case of low-positive IIF titre.9–11

Acknowledgments

We thank Laura Hendrickx, Marie-Christine Clukkers and Silke Willebrords for expert technical assistance.

References

Footnotes

  • Contributors PW reviewed all the medical records of the patients included and performed the analysis. EDL, RW, SV and DB took care of the patients and helped with clinical classification of the patients. XB wrote a draft of the manuscript. All authors reviewed the draft and approved the submission of the manuscript.

  • Funding This work was supported by Thermo Fisher.

  • Competing interests XB has received lecture fees from and has been a consultant for Thermo Fisher.

  • Ethics approval Ethics committee of the University Hospitals Leuven.

  • Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; internally peer reviewed.

  • Patient consent for publication Not required.

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