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Presence of anti-acetylated peptide antibodies (AAPA) in inflammatory arthritis and other rheumatic diseases suggests discriminative diagnostic capacity towards early rheumatoid arthritis

Authors :
Paul Studenic
Alessia Alunno
Daniela Sieghart
Holger Bang
Daniel Aletaha
Stephan Blüml
Helmuth Haslacher
Josef S Smolen
Roberto Gerli
Günter Steiner
Source :
Therapeutic Advances in Musculoskeletal Disease, Vol 13 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
SAGE Publishing, 2021.

Abstract

Aims: To determine the diagnostic value of anti-acetylated peptide antibodies (AAPA) in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Methods: Three acetylated peptides (ac-lysine, ac-lysine.inv and ac-ornithine) derived from vimentin were employed to measure AAPA by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) in sera of 120 patients with early RA (eRA), 195 patients with established RA (est RA), 99 healthy controls (HC), and 216 patients with other inflammatory rheumatic diseases. A carbamylated and a citrullinated version of the vimentin peptide were used additionally. Receiver operating characteristics and logistic regression analyses were used to assess the discriminative capacity of AAPA. Results: AAPA were detected in 60% of eRA and 68.7% of estRA patients, 22.2% of HC, and 7.1– 30.6% of patients with other rheumatic diseases. Importantly, AAPA were also present in 40% of seronegative RA patients, while antibodies to the carbamylated peptide were detected less frequently. Diagnostic sensitivity of individual peptides for eRA was 28.3%, 35.8%, and 34% for ac-lysine, ac-ornithine, and ac-lysine.inv, respectively. Positive likelihood ratios (LR+) for eRA versus HC were 14.0, 7.1, and 2.1. While the presence of a single AAPA showed varying specificity (range: 84–98%), the presence of two AAPA increased specificity considerably since 26.7% of eRA, as compared with 6% of disease controls, were double positive. Thus, double positivity discriminated eRA from axial spondyloarthritis with a LR+ of 18.3. Remarkably, triple positivity was 100% specific for RA, being observed in 10% of eRA and 21.5% of estRA patients, even in the absence of RF and ACPA. Conclusion: AAPA are highly prevalent in early RA and occur also independently of RF and ACPA, thereby reducing the gap of seronegativity. Furthermore, multiple AAPA reactivity increased the specificity for RA, suggesting high diagnostic value of AAPA testing.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17597218 and 1759720X
Volume :
13
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Therapeutic Advances in Musculoskeletal Disease
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.fe8b8baf88df4ebaaed02c245dda8bdb
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/1759720X211022533