| Literature DB >> 33927550 |
Andrea Tešija Kuna1, Lovorka Đerek2, Vedrana Drvar3, Ana Kozmar4, Katarina Gugo5.
Abstract
Antinuclear antibodies (ANA) represent a family of autoantibodies targeting ubiquitous cellular constituents and are a hallmark of systemic inflammatory autoimmune rheumatic diseases named connective tissue diseases (CTD). The gold standard method for ANA determination is indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) on the human laryngeal epidermoid carcinoma cell line type 2 substrate (HEp-2), but with increasing demand for ANA testing, novel methods eased for automation emerged, which allows testing by staff less experienced in this specific field of laboratory diagnostic. In 2016 The working group (WG) for laboratory diagnostics of autoimmune diseases as part of the Committee for the Scientific Professional Development of the Croatian Society of Medical Biochemistry and Laboratory Medicine (CSMBLM) published the data of a survey regarding general practice in laboratory diagnostics of autoimmune diseases in Croatia. Results indicated high diversity in the performance of autoantibody testing as well as reporting of the results and indicated the need of creating recommendations for the assessment of ANA that would help harmonize diagnostics of systemic autoimmune rheumatic diseases in Croatia. This document encompasses twenty-seven recommendations for ANA testing created concerning indications for ANA testing, preanalytical, analytical, and postanalytical issues, including rational algorithm and quality control assurance. These recommendations are based on the relevant international recommendations and guidelines for the assessment of ANA testing and relevant literature search and should help to harmonize the approach in ANA testing and clarify differences in interpretation of the results obtained using different methods of determination. Croatian Society of Medical Biochemistry and Laboratory Medicine.Entities:
Keywords: antinuclear antibodies; autoimmunity; harmonization; recommendations
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33927550 PMCID: PMC8047791 DOI: 10.11613/BM.2021.020502
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Med (Zagreb) ISSN: 1330-0962 Impact factor: 2.313
Clinically most relevant ANA specificities in inflammatory connective tissue diseases
| anti-dsDNA | > 95% in active SLE with renal involvement | ACR and SLICC classification criterion for SLE |
| anti-SS-A (Ro60) | 60–96% in primary SjS | ACR/EULAR classification criterion for primary SjS |
| anti-Ro52/TRIM21 | 17–63% SjS | Found in various autoimmune diseases |
| anti-SS-B (La) | 40–70% in primary SjS | Usually occur with SS-A antibodies |
| anti-Sm | 5–10% SLE | ACR and SLICC classification criterion for SLE |
| anti-RNP | 100% MCTD, 13–32% SLE | Serological hallmark of MCTD (when present in high titer) |
| anti-Topo I/Scl70 | 65% in diffuse SSc | ACR/EULAR classification criterion for SSc |
| anti-CENP B | 57–82% of patients with CREST syndrome | ACR/EULAR classification criterion for SSc |
| anti-RNA-Pol III | 3–19% in SSc | ACR/EULAR classification criterion for SSc |
| anti-Jo-1 | 24–30% IIM | ACR/EULAR classification criterion for adult and juvenile IIM |
| anti-PM/Scl | 24–55% polymyositis/scleroderma overlap syndrome, 8–12% IIM, 1–16% SSc | Diagnostic marker for polymyositis/scleroderma overlap syndrome |
| anti-PCNA | 3% SLE | Previously considered to be very specific for SLE |
| anti-ribosomal P | 10–35% SLE | High specificity for SLE |
| anti-histones | 92–95% drug-induced lupus, 50–80% SLE | High specificity for drug-induced lupus |
| anti-nucleosomes | 56–90% SLE | High specificity for SLE |
| dsDNA – double stranded DNA. CTDs – Connective tissue diseases. SLE – Systemic lupus erythematosus. ACR – American College of Rheumatology. SLICC – Systemic Lupus International. Collaborating Clinics Classification Criteria for Systemic Lupus Erythematosus. SS-A (Ro60) – antigen A associated with Sjögren syndrome (60 kDa ribonucleoprotein). SjS – Sjögren syndrome. EULAR – European League Against Rheumatism. SCLE – Subacute cutaneous lupus erythematosus. NLE – Neonatal lupus erythematosus. Ro52/TRIM21 – 52 kDa ribonucleoprotein/ Tripartite motif-containing protein 21. SSc – Systemic sclerosis. PBC – Primary biliary cholangitis. AIH – Autoimmune hepatitis. CHB – Congenital heart block. SS-B (La) – antigen B associated with Sjögren syndrome. Sm – Smith antigen. RNP – ribonucleoprotein complex. MCTD – Mixed connective tissue disease. Scl-70/Topo-I – 70kDa antigen associated with scleroderma/Topoisomerase I. CENP-B – centromere protein B. CREST – Calcinosis, Raynaud’s syndrome, Esophageal dysmotility, Sclerodactyly, and Telangiectasia. RNA-Pol-III – RNA polymerase III. Jo-1 – histidyl-tRNA synthetase. IIM – Idiopathic inflammatory myopathies. PM/Scl – antigen associated with Polymyositis / Scleroderma overlap syndrome. PCNA –proliferating cell nuclear antigen. ribosomal P – ribosomal P protein. | ||
Figure 1Algorithm of ANA IIF positive samples specific antibody testing depending on fluorescence pattern. Each pattern is designated with a corresponding alphanumerical code (see the following section for explanation). Minimally available specific antibody tests are designated with bold letters. *DFS70/LEGF reflex testing only if no ENA are confirmed; †CENP-B antibody testing is not obligatory since fluorescence pattern is highly specific. ANA – antinuclear antibodies. IIF – indirect immunofluorescence. HEp-2 – human laryngeal epidermoid carcinoma cell line type 2. PM/DM – polymyositis/dermatomyositis. Jo-1 – histidyl-tRNA synthetase. SLE – systemic lupus erythematosus. SjS – Sjögren syndrome. SCLE – subacute lupus erythematosus. SS-A (Ro60) – antigen A associated with Sjögren syndrome (60 kDa ribonucleoprotein). dsDNA – double-stranded DNA. DFS70/LEGF – 70 kDa antigen associated with dense fine speckled fluorescence pattern on HEp-2 cells/ lens epithelium-derived growth factor. CENP-B – centromere protein B. Ro52/TRIM21 – 52 kDa ribonucleoprotein/ Tripartite motif-containing protein 21. SS-B (La) – antigen B associated with Sjögren syndrome. Sm – Smith antigen. RNP – ribonucleoprotein complex. Scl-70/Topo-I – 70kDa antigen associated with scleroderma/Topoisomerase I. RNA-Pol-III – RNA polymerase III. PM/Scl – polymyositis/scleroderma associated antigen. Th/To – nucleolar 7–2/8–2 RNA-protein complex. SSc – Systemic sclerosis. Sp100 – soluble nuclear protein. PML proteins – Promyelocytic Leukemia proteins. gp-210 – nucleoporin 210. PCNA – proliferating cell nuclear antigen. ASMA – anti-smooth muscle antibodies. AMA – antimitochondrial antibodies. M2 – E2 subunit of pyruvate dehydrogenase complex. ENA – extractable nuclear antigens.
Figure 2ICAP Nomenclature and classification tree of ANA IIF patterns on HEp–2 cell substrate (https://www.anapatterns.org/). ICAP – The International consensus on antinuclear antibody pattern. HEp – 2 – human laryngeal epidermoid carcinoma cell line type 2. ANA – antinuclear antibodies. IIF – indirect immunofluorescence. PCNA – proliferating cell nuclear antigen. CENP-F – centromere protein F. AMA – antimitochondrial antibodies.
ICAP nomenclature for the description of fluorescence patterns and corresponding clinical significance
| Nuclear homogenous fluorescence | SLE, drug-induced lupus, JIA | |
| Nuclear dense fine speckled | Rare in SjS, SSc, and SLE, more often in healthy individuals and different non-autoimmune inflammatory diseases (atopic dermatitis, asthma, | |
| Centromere fluorescence | Limited cutaneous SSc, PBC | |
| Nuclear fine speckled fluorescence | SjS, SLE, dermatomyositis | |
| Nuclear large/coarse speckled | MCTD, SLE, SSc | |
| Fluorescence of multiple nuclear dots | PBC, SARDs, dermatomyositis | |
| Fluorescence of few nuclear dots | SjS, SLE, SSc, polymyositis, asymptomatic individuals | |
| Homogenous nucleolar fluorescence | SSc, SSc/PM overlap syndrome | |
| Clumpy nucleolar fluorescence | SSc | |
| Punctate nucleolar fluorescence | SSc, SjS | |
| Smooth nuclear envelope fluorescence | SLE, SjS, seronegative arthritis | |
| Punctate nuclear envelope fluorescence | PBC | |
| PCNA-like fluorescence | SLE, other disorders | |
| CENP-F – like fluorescence | Carcinomas, other disorders | |
| Topo-I like fluorescence | SSc | |
| Cytoplasmic fibrillar linear fluorescence | MCTD, chronic active hepatitis, cirrhosis, myasthenia gravis, Morbus Crohn, PBC, long-term haemodialysis, rare in SARDs | |
| Cytoplasmic fibrillar filamentous fluorescence | Infective or inflammatory disorders, long-term haemodialysis, alcoholic liver disease, SARDs, psoriasis, healthy individuals | |
| Cytoplasmic fibrillar segmental fluorescence | Myasthenia gravis, Morbus Crohn, ulcerative colitis | |
| Fluorescence of cytoplasmic discrete dots/GW body-like | PBC, SARDs, different neurologic and autoimmune disorders | |
| Cytoplasmic dense fine speckled fluorescence | Anti-synthetase syndrome, polymyositis/dermatomyositis, SLE, juvenile SLE, neuropsychiatry SLE | |
| Cytoplasmic speckled fluorescence | Anti-synthetase syndrome, polymyositis/dermatomyositis, limited SSc, idiopathic pleural effusion | |
| Cytoplasmic reticular fluorescence/AMA | Often in PBC and SSc, rare in other SARDs | |
| Cytoplasmic polar/Golgi like fluorescence | Rare in SjS, SLE, RA, MCTD, GPA, idiopathic cerebral ataxia, paraneoplastic cerebral degeneration, virus infections | |
| “Rods & Rings “ fluorescence | HCV patients after IFN-γ/ribavirin therapy, rare in SLE, Hashimoto thyroiditis and healthy individuals | |
| Centrosome fluorescence | Rare in SSc, Raynaud syndrome, infection with viruses and mycoplasmas | |
| Fluorescence of spindle fiber | Rare in SjS, SLE, and other CTDs | |
| NuMA-like fluorescence | SjS, SLE, other disorders | |
| Fluorescence of intercellular bridge | Rare in SSc, Raynaud syndrome and malignancies | |
| Mitotic chromosomal fluorescence | Rare in discoid lupus erythematosus, chronic lymphatic leukemia, SjS, and polymyalgia rheumatica | |
| *Report should contain description of fluorescence pattern with corresponding AC number, without clinical significance. Instead, link to the ICAP web site where corresponding clinical significance can be found should be given in the comment of the report. | ||
Nomenclature on the report
| Screen testsa |
|---|
| 1. Antinuclear antibodies (ANA) – screen testb |
| 2. Screen test for the restricted number of specific antinuclear antibodies (ANA): specify included antigensc |
| 3. ENA screen test: specify included antigensd |
| Tests for specific antibodiesa |
| 1. Antibodies to double-stranded DNA (anti-dsDNA) |
| 2. Antibodies to SS-A (Ro) antigen (anti-SS-A (Ro))e |
| 3. Antibodies to SS-A (Ro60) antigen (anti-SS-A (Ro60)) |
| 4. Antibodies to Ro52 antigen (anti-Ro52) |
| 5. Antibodies to SS-B (La) antigen (anti-SS-B (La)) |
| 6. Antibodies to Smith antigen (anti-Sm)e |
| 7. Antibodies to RNP antigen (anti-RNP)f |
| 8. Antibodies to Topoisomerase I (anti-Topo I/Scl70) |
| 9. Antibodies to Jo-1 antigen (anti-Jo-1) |
| 10. Antibodies to centromere protein B (anti-CENP B) |
| 11. Antibodies to PM/Scl antigen (anti-PM/Scl) |
| 12. Antibodies to proliferating cell nuclear antigen (anti-PCNA) |
| 13. Antibodies to ribosomal P protein (anti-ribosomal P) |
| 14. Antibodies to histones |
| 15. Antibodies to nucleosomes |
| 16. Antibodies to RNA-polymerase III (anti-RNA-Pol III) |
| 17. Antibodies to DFS70 antigen (anti-DFS70) |
| aMethod should be specified either along with the test name or in the legend of the report. bRefers exclusively on IIF test on HEp-2 or HEp-2000 substrate. cRefers to solid-based screen tests commercially available under the common name CTD-screen. dENA screen test refers exclusively on test comprising following antigens: SS-A (Ro) (when there is no distinction between Ro52 and Ro 60) or SS-A (Ro60) and Ro52 (TRIM21), separately; SS-B (La); Sm (or SmD according to manufacturer specification); RNP (U1-RNP or Sm/RNP, according to manufacturer specification); Scl-70 (Topo-1) and Jo-1. In the case that the screen test includes additional antigens that are not included in ENA term, use the nomenclature given under number 2. eSS-A (Ro) – if there is no distinction between Ro52 and Ro60; e Alternatively, anti-SmD in the case that manufacturer declares specificity exclusively for SmD antigen. fanti-RNP term comprises both anti-U1-RNP and anti-Sm/RNP. IIF – indirect immunofluorescence. HEp-2 – human laryngeal epidermoid carcinoma cell line type 2 substrate. CTD – connective tissue diseases. ENA – extractable nuclear antigens. RNP – ribonucleoprotein complex. |