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2020 international consensus on ANCA testing beyond systemic vasculitis

Authors :
Judith Savige
Alan D. Salama
Maria José Rego Sousa
Pavel Novikov
Athanasios G. Tzioufas
Sergey Moiseev
Yehuda Shoenfeld
Elena Csernok
Xavier Bossuyt
Yoshihiro Arimura
Marc Ferrante
Marvin J. Fritzler
Benjamin Terrier
Luis Felipe Flores-Suárez
Jan Willem Cohen Tervaert
Mark A. Little
Ulrich Specks
Mårten Segelmark
J. Charles Jennette
Dimitrios P. Bogdanos
David Jayne
Charles D. Pusey
Stephen P. McAdoo
Jan Damoiseaux
Ming Hui Zhao
Pietro Invernizzi
Antonella Radice
Renato Alberto Sinico
Severine Vermeire
Moiseev, S
Tervaert, J
Arimura, Y
Bogdanos, D
Csernok, E
Damoiseaux, J
Ferrante, M
Flores-Suárez, L
Fritzler, M
Invernizzi, P
Jayne, D
Jennette, J
Little, M
Mcadoo, S
Novikov, P
Pusey, C
Radice, A
Salama, A
Savige, J
Segelmark, M
Shoenfeld, Y
Sinico, R
Sousa, M
Specks, U
Terrier, B
Tzioufas, A
Vermeire, S
Zhao, M
Bossuyt, X
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier Inc., 2020.

Abstract

This document follows up on a 2017 revised international consensus on anti-neutrophil cytoplasm antibodies (ANCA) testing in granulomatosis with polyangiitis and microscopic polyangiitis and focuses on the clinical and diagnostic value of ANCA detection in patients with connective tissue diseases, idiopathic interstitial pneumonia, autoimmune liver diseases, inflammatory bowel diseases, anti-glomerular basement membrane (GBM) disease, infections, malignancy, and during drug treatment. Current evidence suggests that in certain settings beyond systemic vasculitis, ANCA may have clinical, pathogenic and/or diagnostic relevance. Antigen-specific ANCA targeting proteinase-3 and myeloperoxidase should be tested by solid phase immunoassays in any patient with clinical features suggesting ANCA-associated vasculitis and in all patients with anti-GBM disease, idiopathic interstitial pneumonia, and infective endocarditis associated with nephritis, whereas in patients with other aforementioned disorders routine ANCA testing is not recommended. Among patients with autoimmune liver diseases or inflammatory bowel diseases, ANCA testing may be justified in patients with suspected autoimmune hepatitis type 1 who do not have conventional autoantibodies or in case of diagnostic uncertainty to discriminate ulcerative colitis from Crohn's disease. In these cases, ANCA should be tested by indirect immunofluorescence as the target antigens are not yet well characterized. Many questions concerning the optimal use of ANCA testing in patients without ANCA-associated vasculitis remain to be answered.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9a00983ee43d3767af05f2d795344709