| Literature DB >> 27473142 |
Simón Gundín1, Juan Irure-Ventura1, Esther Asensio1, David Ramos1, Michael Mahler2, Victor Martínez-Taboada1, Marcos López-Hoyos3.
Abstract
The presence of antinuclear antibodies (ANA) is associated with a wide range of ANA-associated autoimmune rheumatic diseases (AARD). The most commonly method used for the detection of ANA is indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) on HEp-2 cells. This method is very sensitive but unspecific. As a consequence, ANA testing on HEp-2 substrates outside a proper clinical specialist framework may lead to inappropriate referrals to tertiary care specialists and, worst case inappropriate and potentially toxic therapy for the patient. Among ANA, isolated anti-DFS70 antibodies represent a potentially important biomarker that can be clinically used to discriminate AARD from non-AARD patients in ANA IIF positive individuals. Therefore, their presence may avoid unnecessary follow-up testing and referrals. In our study, we investigated if the implementation of a new ANA workup algorithm allowing for the identification of anti-DFS70 antibodies is cost-effective through the reduction of both unnecessary follow-up testing and outpatient clinic visits generated by the clinical suspicion of a potential AARD. None of the 181 patients included with a positive monospecific anti-DFS70 antibody result developed SARD during the follow-up period of 10 years. The reduction in number of tests after ANA and anti-DFS70 positive results was significant for anti-ENA (230 vs. 114 tests; p < 0.001) and anti-dsDNA antibodies (448 vs. 114 tests; p < 0.001). In addition, the outpatient clinic visits decreased by 70 % (p < 0.001). In total, the adoption of the new algorithm including anti-DFS70 antibody testing resulted in a cost saving of 60869.53 € for this pilot study. In conclusion, the use of anti-DFS70 antibodies was clearly cost-efficient in our setting.Entities:
Keywords: ANA-associated autoimmune rheumatic diseases; Antinuclear antibodies; Cost-effectiveness; DFS-70; Indirect immunofluorescence
Year: 2016 PMID: 27473142 PMCID: PMC4967047 DOI: 10.1007/s13317-016-0082-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Auto Immun Highlights ISSN: 2038-0305
Diagnosis of the cohort and presence of anti-DFS70
| Main diagnosis on the cohort | Number of patients (%) | Patients with anti-DFS70 antibodies |
|---|---|---|
| Systemic lupus erythematosus | 44 (24) | 1 |
| Sjörgren syndrome | 23 (13) | 0 |
| Systemic sclerosis | 18 (10) | 0 |
| Dermatologic diseases | 14 (8) | 4 |
| Arthritis | 13 (7) | 0 |
| Rheumatologic diseases | 10 (6) | 0 |
| Ophtalmologic diseases | 8 (4) | 5 |
| Arthralgia | 7 (4) | 4 |
| Arthrosis | 6 (3) | 3 |
| Raynaud phenomenon | 6 (3) | 1 |
| Hematologic diseases | 5 (3) | 2 |
| Intestinal diseases | 5 (3) | 0 |
| Neoplasms | 5 (3) | 0 |
| Vasculitis | 2 (1) | 0 |
| Others | 15 (8) | 3 |
| Total | 181 | 23 |
Rheumatologic diseases (fibromyalgia, dermatomyositis, antiphospholipid syndrome, rheumatic polymyalgia and ankylosing spondylitis)
Fig. 1a Conventional algorithm used in HUMV (Spain). Abbreviations (H, Sp, Nuc, Cent, Dense fine sp.) refer to the different patterns found in ANA IIF test on HEp-2 cells: homogeneous, speckled, nucleolar, centromere and dense fine speckled. SARD Systemic autoimmune rheumatic diseases. b New algorithm including anti-DFS70 antibody detection. Abbreviations (H, Sp, Nuc, Cent, Dense fine sp.) made reference to the different patterns found in ANA IIF test on HEp-2 cells: homogeneous, speckled, nucleolar, centromere and dense fine speckled. SARD Systemic autoimmune rheumatic diseases
Anti-DFS70 antibody distribution depending on the IIF pattern
| Anti-DFS70 presence | Homogeneus pattern | Speckled pattern | Centromere pattern | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DFS70− | 93 | 54 | 11 | 158 |
| DFS70+ (%) | 16 (14.7 %) | 7 (11.5 %) | 0 (0 %) | 23 (12.7 %) |
| Total | 109 | 61 | 11 | 181 |
Fig. 2Differences in number of ANA IIF, anti-dsDNA and ENA determinations between the conventional and the new algorithm. (***p < 0.001; **p < 0.01; *p < 0.05; NS not significant)
Fig. 3Differences in number of clinic visits between the conventional and the new algorithm. The total outpatient clinic visits (OCV) are split in rheumatologic visits (Rheuma V.) and the other visits (Other V.). (***p < 0.001; **p < 0.01; *p < 0.05; NS Not significant)
Fig. 4Comparison of total costs using the conventional and the new algorithm, showing costs of laboratory tests (test cost), costs of outpatient clinic visits (OCV cost), and total costs in Euros (total cost)