Literature DB >> 9552224

The presence of anti-neutrophil antibodies reflects clinical and genetic heterogeneity within inflammatory bowel disease.

J Satsangi1, C J Landers, K I Welsh, K Koss, S Targan, D P Jewell.   

Abstract

A detailed investigation of the relationship between anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA) status, HLA genotype, and clinical patterns of inflammatory bowel disease was carried out, involving 236 European patients resident in the United Kingdom [120 had ulcerative colitis (UC), 116 had Crohn's disease (CD)]. ANCA status was determined on coded plasma samples in Los Angeles using a two-stage assay [fixed neutrophil enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and indirect immunofluorescence], and HLA genotyping was carried out by polymerase chain reaction. The results provide evidence that ANCA reflect clinical and genetic heterogeneity within the inflammatory bowel diseases. In the UC patients, 78.3% were ANCA positive [64.2 perinuclear (pANCA)], but only 46.5% CD patients were ANCA positive (19.3% pANCA). Furthermore, mean ELISA binding was significantly lower in CD (14.5% +/- 18.8% versus 40.5% +/- 41.0% in UC, p = 2.31 x 10(-9)). Only 15 CD samples, all from patients with colonic disease, displayed ELISA > 20%; and the six CD patients with highest ELISA binding had clinical features very similar to ulcerative colitis. Moreover, in UC, significant relationships between ANCA status and genotype were noted. Thus, 92.7% of patients with the DR3 DQ2 TNF2 haplotype were ANCA positive [p = 0.03 versus DR3 DQ2 TNF2-negative patients (73.9%)]. ELISA binding was increased in DR3 DQ2 TNF2-positive patients (56.0 versus 35.7%, p = 0.02). In this population of UC, ANCA was not associated with DR2, DR4, or clinical pattern. These data emphasize the many factors that need to be considered in genetic marker studies in inflammatory bowel disease. Extensive disease heterogeneity, ethnicity, and methodological differences in ANCA detection are all pertinent.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9552224     DOI: 10.1097/00054725-199802000-00004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Inflamm Bowel Dis        ISSN: 1078-0998            Impact factor:   5.325


  20 in total

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Review 5.  Serum anti-glycan antibody biomarkers for inflammatory bowel disease diagnosis and progression: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

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8.  High-level serum antibodies to bacterial antigens are associated with antibiotic-induced clinical remission in Crohn's disease: a pilot study.

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9.  Anti-Saccharomyces cerevisiae antibody (ASCA) positivity is associated with increased risk for early surgery in Crohn's disease.

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10.  Multivariate modeling identifies neutrophil- and Th17-related factors as differential serum biomarkers of chronic murine colitis.

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