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Patients double-seropositive for ANCA and anti-GBM antibodies have varied renal survival, frequency of relapse, and outcomes compared to single-seropositive patients

Authors :
McAdoo, Stephen P.
Tanna, Anisha
Hruskova, Zdenka
Holm, Lisa
Weiner, Maria
Arulkumaran, Nishkantha
Kang, Amy
Satrapova, Veronika
Levy, Jeremy
Ohlsson, Sophie
Tesar, Vladimir
Segelmark, Mårten
Pusey, Charles D.
McAdoo, Stephen P.
Tanna, Anisha
Hruskova, Zdenka
Holm, Lisa
Weiner, Maria
Arulkumaran, Nishkantha
Kang, Amy
Satrapova, Veronika
Levy, Jeremy
Ohlsson, Sophie
Tesar, Vladimir
Segelmark, Mårten
Pusey, Charles D.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Co-presentation with both ANCA and anti-GBM antibodies is thought to be relatively rare. Current studies of such double-positive cases report small numbers and variable outcomes. To study this further we retrospectively analyzed clinical features and long-term outcomes of a large cohort of 568 contemporary patients with ANCA-associated vasculitis, 41 patients with anti-GBM disease, and 37 double-positive patients with ANCA and anti-GBM disease from four European centers. Double-positive patients shared characteristics of ANCA-associated vasculitis (AAV), such as older age distribution and longer symptom duration before diagnosis, and features of anti-GBM disease, such as severe renal disease and high frequency of lung hemorrhage at presentation. Despite having more evidence of chronic injury on renal biopsy compared to patients with anti-GBM disease, double-positive patients had a greater tendency to recover from being dialysis-dependent after treatment and had intermediate long-term renal survival compared to the single-positive patients. However, overall patient survival was similar in all three groups. Predictors of poor patient survival included advanced age, severe renal failure, and lung hemorrhage at presentation. No single-positive anti-GBM patients experienced disease relapse, whereas approximately half of surviving patients with AAV and double-positive patients had recurrent disease during a median follow-up of 4.8 years. Thus, double-positive patients have a truly hybrid disease phenotype, requiring aggressive early treatment for anti-GBM disease, and careful long-term follow-up and consideration for maintenance immunosuppression for AAV. Since double-positivity appears common, further work is required to define the underlying mechanisms of this association and define optimum treatment strategies.<br />Funding Agencies|UK National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Academic Clinical Lectureship; Wellcome Trust; NIHR Imperial Biomedical Research Centre; Charles University Hospital, Prague, Czech Republic [RVO-VFN64165]

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1234130942
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016.j.kint.2017.03.014