| Literature DB >> 29065901 |
Noémie Gensous1,2, Aurélie Marti3, Thomas Barnetche4, Patrick Blanco1, Estibaliz Lazaro1,5, Julien Seneschal3, Marie-Elise Truchetet1,4, Pierre Duffau1,2, Christophe Richez6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to identify the most reliable biomarkers in the literature that could be used as flare predictors in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE).Entities:
Keywords: Biomarker; Exacerbation; Flare; Systematic review; Systemic lupus erythematosus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29065901 PMCID: PMC5655881 DOI: 10.1186/s13075-017-1442-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arthritis Res Ther ISSN: 1478-6354 Impact factor: 5.156
Fig. 1Study selection process. ACR American College of Rheumatology, EULAR European League Against Rheumatism
Predictivity of anti-dsDNA antibodies in SLE flares
| Assay | Number of patients ( | Findings | Study |
|---|---|---|---|
| Positive results | |||
| CLIF | 61 | 67% of patients in the group with exacerbations had persistent anti-dsDNA ab versus 27% in the patient group without exacerbations | Oelzner et al., 1996 [ |
| CLIF | 299 | Increased level at baseline was a risk factor for flare in the haematological system ( | Petri et al., 2009 [ |
| CLIF | 65 | Cases, defined as experiencing a surge in anti-dsDNA from 0 to 3+/4+, or from 1+ to 4+, within a period of less than 12 months, were more likely to experience a severe flare than controls (OR 6.3 (CI 2.0–19.9), | Pan et al., 2014 [ |
| Farr | 487 | Frequency of renal flare was lower in patients with sustained reductions in anti-dsDNA ab (> 10% from baseline levels for at least 2/3 of all observed values) than in patients with stable or increasing antibody levels | Linnik et al., 2005 [ |
| Farr | 130 | All 15 major exacerbations were preceded by an increase of the anti-dsDNA ab levels, with a doubling time of less than 6 weeks for 13 patients. There were four other patients with an increase in anti-dsDNA levels who did not show any exacerbation | Swaak et al., 1982 [ |
| Farr | 143 | A continuous increase in the anti-dsDNA ab was found for all patients in the 24 weeks preceding exacerbations with a doubling time < 10 weeks | Swaak et al., 1986 [ |
| Farr | 78 | A sharp drop in anti-dsDNA ab, usually preceded by a rise, was related to a serious exacerbation | Swaak et al., 1979 [ |
| Farr | 151 | Anti-dsDNA increase started 4 months prior to the relapse and reached a maximum at the moment of relapse whereas no fluctuations were observed in patients with persistently inactive disease | Coremans et al., 1995 [ |
| Farr | 23 | Presence of anti-dsDNA abs (> 5 IU/ml) or increase (> 25%) was associated with a high risk of renal flare | Matrat et al., 2011 [ |
| Farr | 199 | Patients with anti-dsDNA ab (> 15 IU/ml) had a greater risk of developing proliferative glomerulonephritis than patients without auto-antibodies ( | Cortés-Hernàndez et al., 2004 [ |
| ELISA | 70 | Anti-dsDNA antibodies were detected in 14 (93.3%) of 15 patients with subsequent lupus nephritis, compared with 24 (72.7%) of 33 patients with active SLE and no nephritis ( | Meyer et al., 2009 [ |
| Farr and EliA | 48 | All 22 exacerbations were accompanied by changes in anti-dsDNA (> 25%) in one or both assays | Hillebrand et al., 2013 [ |
| CLIF and ELISA | 53 | Increase in anti-dsDNA ab predicted flares with M-SLEDAI and M-LAI indices | Ho et al., 2001 [ |
| CLIF, ELISA and Farr | 72 | 89% of the exacerbations were preceded by a significant increase in anti-dsDNA ab levels (defined as ≥ 2 titres by the | ter Borg et al., 1990 [ |
| ELISA and Farr | 34 | Patients with rises in IgG class anti-dsDNA ab by ELISA (≥ 6 IU/ml) or in anti-dsDNA by Farr assay (≥ 15 IU/ml) had a significantly higher cumulative risk for relapses, with a median time of 2.3 and 2.1 months respectively | Bootsma et al., 1997 [ |
| NA | 189 | Persistently positive anti-dsDNA after cyclophosphamide treatment was an independent predictor of renal flares | Mok et al., 2004 [ |
| NA | 218 | The combination of complement C3, C4 and anti-dsDNA antibody is reasonably specific for predicting lupus flares in the preceding 4 weeks | To et al., 2011 [ |
| NA | 562 | Elevated titres (≥ 200 IU/ml) at baseline were independent predictors of moderate-to-severe flares at week 52 | Petri et al., 2013 [ |
| Negative results | |||
| CLIF | 27 | Serial measurements of anti-dsDNA ab were poor markers of exacerbation. | Lloyd and Schur, 1981 [ |
| Farr | 48 | Changes in anti-dsDNA ab failed to correctly predict a change in disease activity | Abrass et al., 1980 [ |
| Farr | 202 | Fluctuations in anti-dsDNA ab were poor predictors of disease exacerbations according to SLEDAI | Esdaile et al., 1996 [ |
| Farr | 120 | No consistent association between anti-dsDNA ab positivity and risk of flare defined by SLEDAI | Mirzayan et al., 2000 [ |
| Farr | 46 | Baseline anti-dsDNA ab failed to predict renal relapses | El Hachmi et al., 2003 [ |
| ELISA | 23 | Anti-dsDNA ab were not predictive of flare | Steiman et al., 2010 [ |
| Farr and CLIF | 73 | No difference between the patients who flared and the patients who did not | Walz LeBlanc et al., 1994 [ |
| NA | 57 | Percentage of patients who had positive anti-dsDNA ab at the time of the diagnosis was not higher in patients with a subsequent exacerbation | Tomioka et al., 2008 [ |
| NA | 110 | Anti-dsDNA ab were not identified as a predictor of flare | Swaak et al., 1989 [ |
| NA | 218 | Anti-dsDNA lacks sensitivity in predicting serosal and neuropsychiatric lupus flares | To et al., 2011 [ |
anti-dsDNA ab anti-double-stranded DNA antibodies, CI confidence interval, CLIF Crithidia luciliae immunofluorescence, ELISA enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, EliA automated enzyme fluoroimmunoassay, M-LAI Modified Lupus Activity Index, M-SLEDAI Modified Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Disease Activity Index, NA not available, ns not significant, OR odds ratio, SLE systemic lupus erythematosus, SLEDAI Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Disease Activity Index
Predictivity of complement in SLE flares
| Complement fraction(s) | Number of patients ( | Findings | Study |
|---|---|---|---|
| Positive results | |||
| C3, C4 and CH50 | 57 | Increased incidence of exacerbation in patients with decreased level of C3 or CH50 | Tomioka et al., 2008 [ |
| C3 and C4 | 562 | Low C3 level (< 900 mg/L) was an independent predictor of a severe SFI flare | Petri et al., 2013 [ |
| C3 and C4 | 299 | Low C3 and C4 were risk factors for a later A or B flare in the mucocutaneous, renal and haematologic systems | Petri et al., 2009 [ |
| C3 | 32 | Low baseline serum C3 (< 900 mg/L) was a predictor for shorter time to flare | Ng et al., 2007 [ |
| C3 and C4 | 46 | Baseline C4 titres were low (< 10 mg/dl) in a significantly higher percentage of relapsing patients | El Hachmi et al., 2003 [ |
| C3 and C4 | 145 | C4 level (< 11 mg/dl) was a significant prognostic factor for renal flares | Illei et al., 2002 [ |
| CH50 | 60 | CH50 level was an independent predictor of lupus flares | Viallard et al., 2001 [ |
| C1q, C3, C4, C5 and C9 | 143 | Decrease of C4, followed by decreases of C1q and C3 levels (< 40% of normal values), started 25 to 20 weeks before renal involvement | Swaak et al., 1986 [ |
| C3a, C5a, C3 and C4 | 40 | C3a levels rose significantly (>200 ng/ml) 1–2 months prior to flare | Hopkins et al., 1988 [ |
| C3 | 189 | Persistently low C3 level was a predictor of nephritic renal flares | Mok et al., 2004 [ |
| C1q, C3, C4 | 27 | When patients were clinically active, mean values of C1q, C4 and CH50 were the lowest obtained for these markers | Lloyd and Schur, 1981 [ |
| C3 and C4 | 71 | Lower C4 levels (< 12 mg/dl), but not C3 levels, significantly predicted renal flares | Birmingham et al., 2010 [ |
| C3 and C4 | 218 | For renal flares: low C3 (0.5–0.74 g/L), sensitivity 34.8%, specificity 63.1%; low C4 (0.1–0.13 g/L), sensitivity 19.4%, specificity 79% | To et al., 2011 [ |
| C3 and C4 | 218 | For severe flares: low C3 (0.5–0.74 g/L), sensitivity 29.2%, specificity 63%, PPV 2.3%, NPV 96.7%; low C4 (0.1–0.13 g/L), sensitivity 19.2%, specificity 79%, PPV 2.8%, NPV 96.0% | To et al., 2011 [ |
| C3, C4, CH50 and complement split products: Ba, Bb; C4d; SC5b-9 | 86 | Most sensitive marker of flare: elevated C4d (> 8.5 mg/ml). Highest specificity and greatest predictive value for flare: elevated Bb (> 1.2 mg/ml) | Buyon et al., 1992 [ |
| Negative results | |||
| C3, C4 and C1q | 202 | Fluctuations were poor predictors of exacerbations | Esdaile et al., 1996 [ |
| C3 and C4 | 53 | Decreasing complement levels did not precede changes in disease activity | Ho et al., 2001 [ |
| CH50 | 120 | No consistent association of complement titre with flares in the subsequent year | Mirzayan et al., 2000 [ |
| C3, C4 and CH50 | 73 | No difference between patients who flared and patients who did not | Walz LeBlanc et al., 1994 [ |
NPV negative predictive value, PPV positive predictive value, SFI SLE Flare Index, SLE systemic lupus erythematosus
Predictivity of anti-C1q antibodies in SLE flares
| Number of patients ( | Findings | Study |
|---|---|---|
| 68 | For renal flares: sensitivity 71%, specificity 92%, PPV 50%, NPV 97% | Siegert et al., 1993 [ |
| 151 | 10 of 14 patients who developed proliferative nephritis had significant increases in anti-C1q level | Coremans et al., 1995 [ |
| 151 | NPV 100% for nephritis | Marto et al., 2005 [ |
| 70 | For severe lupus nephritis: sensitivity 100%, specificity 95.7%, PPV 50%, NPV 100% | Meyer et al., 2009 [ |
| 23 | For renal flares: sensitivity 75.7%, specificity 84%, PPV 56%, NPV 70% | Matrat et al., 2011 [ |
All anti-C1q antibodies were measured using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays
NPV negative predictive value, PPV positive predictive value, SLE systemic lupus erythematosus
Predictivity of anti-ENA in SLE flares
| Biomarker(s) | Number of patients ( | Findings | Study |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anti-Sm ab, ANA | 110 | Presence of anti-Sm ab at baseline was found at a higher incidence in patients developing exacerbation(s) | Swaak et al., 1989 [ |
| ANA | 120 | ANA titre was associated with flares in the subsequent year | Mirzayan et al., 2000 [ |
| ANA, anti-nucleosome and anti-histone ab | 199 | Patients with anti-histone ab (≥ 3 SDs above control mean) at baseline had a higher risk of developing lupus nephritis | Cortes-Hernandez et al., 2004 [ |
| Anti-nucleosome ab | 21 | Time to first flare was significantly correlated with the presence of anti-nucleosome and high anti-nucleosome ab titres | Ng et al., 2006 [ |
| Anti-ENA | 32 | Baseline anti-ENA was an independent predictor of flare | Ng et al., 2007 [ |
| ANA, anti-Sm ab | 562 | Anti-Sm positivity (≥ 15 units/ml) at baseline predicted flares | Petri et al., 2013 [ |
| Anti-Ro | 47 | Fluctuations of anti-Ro/SS-A ab levels were not predictive of flares | Praprotnik et al., 1999 [ |
| Anti-Ro, anti-La, anti-Sm and anti-RNP ab | 45 | Fluctuations of anti-Ro, anti-La, anti-Sm and anti-RNP were not associated with flares | Agarwal et al., 2009 [ |
ab antibody, ANA anti-nuclear antibodies, anti-RNP anti-ribonucleoprotein, anti-ENA anti-extractable nuclear antigen, SD standard deviation, SLE systemic lupus erythematosus
Predictivity of cytokines and chemokines in SLE flares
| Cytokines or chemokines | Number of patients ( | Findings | Study |
|---|---|---|---|
| BAFF/BLyS | 42 | Changes in BAFF levels were unrelated to disease flares | Becker-Merok et al., 2006 [ |
| BAFF/BLyS | 245 | Increase in BLyS level was associated with the occurrence of mild-to-moderate flares | Petri et al., 2008 [ |
| BAFF/BLyS | 562 | Baseline BLyS level independently predicted flare | Petri et al., 2013 [ |
| BLyS, APRIL and 50 analytes: innate and adaptive cytokines, chemokines and soluble TNFR superfamily members | 28 | Patients with impending flare had significant alterations in the levels of 27 soluble mediators at baseline | Munroe et al., 2014 [ |
| CCL2 (MCP-1), CCL19 (MIP-3B), CXCL10 (IP-10) | 267 | Patients with high baseline chemokine levels were at increased risk for flares | Bauer et al., 2009 [ |
| CXCL2, CXCL10 | 25 | High CXCL10 and CXCL2 were predictive of increased disease activity | Andrade et al., 2012 [ |
| IL-2R | 26 | Activation of T cells occurs prior to clinical disease activity | Spronk et al., 1996 [ |
| sIL-2R | NA | Levels of sIL-2R rose significantly up to the moment of maximal disease activity | Spronk et al., 1994 [ |
| sCD25 | 3 | Levels of sCD25 increased preceding periods of exacerbations | Swaak et al., 1995 [ |
| IFN-α, IFN-γ-inducible protein 1 and sialic acid-binding Ig-like lectin 1 | 79 | None of the investigated biomarkers was a predictive variable for flares | Rose et al., 2013 [ |
| Soluble IL-7 receptor (sIL-7R) | 105 | High sIL-7R levels associated with renal flares | Lauwerys et al., 2014 [ |
| IL1-RA, TNFRI | 41 | Patients who flared had higher baseline plasma levels of IL-1RA and TNFRI | Guthridge et al., 2014 [ |
APRIL a proliferation-inducing ligand, BAFF B-cell activating factor, BLyS B-lymphocyte stimulator, CCL chemokine ligand, CXCL chemokine (C–X–C motif) ligand, s soluble, SLE systemic lupus erythematosus, TNFR tumour necrosis factor receptor type