| Literature DB >> 19121207 |
Yashwant Kumar1, Alka Bhatia, Ranjana Walker Minz.
Abstract
It has been more than 50 years since antinuclear antibodies were first discovered and found to be associated with connective tissue diseases. Since then different methods have been described and used for their detection or confirmation. For many decades immunofluorescent antinuclear antibody test has been the "gold standard" in the diagnosis of these disorders. However to increase the sensitivity and specificity of antinuclear antibody detection further approaches were explored. Today a battery of newer techniques are available some of which are now considered better and are competing with the older methods. This article provides an overview on advancement in antinuclear antibody detection methods, their future prospects, advantages, disadvantages and guidelines for use of these tests.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19121207 PMCID: PMC2628865 DOI: 10.1186/1746-1596-4-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagn Pathol ISSN: 1746-1596 Impact factor: 2.644
Sensitivity and specificity of ANA and its clinically important subtypes [18,19]
| SLE | 93 | 57 | |
| Sjogren's syndrome | 48 | 52 | |
| SS | 85 | 54 | |
| PM/dermatomyositis | 61 | 63 | |
| Raynaud phenomena | 64 | 41 | |
| Anti-dsDNA | SLE | 57 | 97 |
| Anti-Sm | SLE | 25–30 | High* |
| Anti-SSA/Ro | Sjogren's syndrome, subacute cutaneous SLE, Neonatal lupus syndrome | 8–70 | 87 |
| Anti-SSB/La | Sjogren's syndrome, subacute cutaneous SLE, Neonatal lupus syndrome | 16–40 | 94 |
| Anti-U3-RNP | SS | 12 | 96 |
| Anticentromere | Limited cutaneous SS | 65 | 99.9 |
| Scl-70 | SS | 20 | 100 |
| Jo-1 | PM | 30 | 95 |
* Precise data not available.
Significance of positive ANA test in CTD and some non-autoimmune conditions [36]
| 1) Lupus erythmatosus (LE) | 1) Juvenile chronic oligoarticular arthritis |
| SLE | 2) Raynaud phenomenon |
| Discoid LE | |
| Subacute cutaneous LE | |
| Neonatal LE | 1) Relatives of patients with CTD |
| Overlap of two or more LE subsets | 2) Other autoimmune diseases (e.g., Rheumatoid arthritis, Idiopathic thrombocytopenia purpura, primary biliary cirrhosis, autoimmune thyroiditis) |
| Overlap of LE with other CTD | 3) Drugs (e.g., procainamide, hydralazine) |
| 2) SS | 4) Silicone breast implant patients |
| Cutaneous SS (morphea) | 5) Fibromyalgia |
| Systemic SS | 6) Chronic infections |
| a) Limited disease | 7) Neoplasms |
| b) Diffuse disease | 8) Elderly persons |
| 3) PM/Dermatomyositis | 9) Pregnant women |
| 4) Sjögren's syndrome (primary and secondary) | 10) Healthy persons |
| 5) Mixed CTD | |
| 6) Overlap and undifferentiated CTD |
Common IF-ANA patterns associated with specific diseases
| Speckled | ENA, RNP, Sm, SSA/Ro, SSB/La, Scl-70, Jo-1, ribosomal-P | SLE, Mixed CTD, SS, Primary Sjogren's syndrome, PM |
| Homogenous | dsDNA, Histones | SLE, Drug induced SLE |
| Peripheral (rim) | RNP, Sm, SSA/Ro | SLE, SS |
| Nucleolar | Anti-PM-Scl, anti-RNA polymerase I-III, anti-U3-RNP, To RNP | SS, PM |
| Centromere | CENP A-E | Limited SS |
Figure 1Diagrammatic representation of common nuclear patterns observed under fluorescence microscopy.
Performance of various tests used for detection of specific antibodies
| Cost effective | Time consuming | |
| Automated | Potential for false positives | |
| Cost effective | Low sensitivity | |
| Cost effective | Modest sensitivity | |
| Semiquantitative | Time consuming | |
| More sensitive than DID and CIE | Expensive | |
| Easy to perform, rapid | Qualitative | |
| Detects multiple antibodies at a time | Expensive | |
| Cost effective | Provides single result at a time | |
| Detects multiple antibodies at a time | Not widely available |
Figure 2Algorithmic approach for ANA testing.