IF - ANA Immunofluorescent Antinuclear Antibody - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 82
About This Presentation
Title:

IF - ANA Immunofluorescent Antinuclear Antibody

Description:

IF - ANA Immunofluorescent Antinuclear Antibody – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:6523
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 83
Provided by: clsUm
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: IF - ANA Immunofluorescent Antinuclear Antibody


1
IF - ANAImmunofluorescent Antinuclear Antibody
2
Outline
  • Introduction
  • Background
  • Uses
  • Principle of test
  • Procedure
  • Interpretation of results
  • QC

3
Outline
  • Limitations
  • Accuracy
  • LE test
  • Alternate tests
  • Confirmatory test
  • Conclusion
  • References

4
ANAs
  • Antinuclear antibodies
  • autoantibodies to nuclear components
  • types
  • systemic
  • specificity
  • sensitivity

5
Significance of ANAs
  • ANAs are produced in a variety of autoimmune
    diseases. There is a strong correlation between
    the type of ANA produced, the titer of the ANA
    and specific diseases.

6
Autoimmunity
  • Represents a breakdown of the immune systems
    ability to discriminate between self and nonself
  • Characterized by the persistent activation of
    immunologic effector mechanisms that alter the
    function and integrity of individual cells and
    organs
  • Site of damage, organ specific or systemic,
    depends on the origination of the inappropriate
    immune response

7
Factors Influencing the Development of
Autoimmunity
  • Every individual, given the appropriate
    circumstances, has the potential to develop
    autoimmunity as lymphocytes that are potentially
    reactive with self antigens exist within the
    body.
  • Factors effecting the control of these clones of
    lymphocytes and ultimately the antibodies
    produced are
  • Genetic factors
  • Age
  • Exogenous factors

8
Genetic Factors
  • Direct genetic etiology not yet established
  • Tendency for familial aggregates
  • Correlation with certain HLA antigens
  • More frequent in females
  • Sex hormones implicated in some disorders

9
Age
  • Formation of autoantibodies steadily increases
    with age
  • Peak seen between 60-70 years of age

10
Exogenous Factors
  • UV radiation
  • Drugs
  • Viruses
  • Chronic infectious disease
  • All play a role in the development of autoimmune
    disorders.

11
Autoimmunity
  • In theory, there are a certain number of clones
    of B cells that are not tolerant to self. These
    cells are normally suppressed by TS cells. In
    the presence of a B cell mitogen, these clones
    will proliferate in the absence of T cell
    enhancement.
  • The resulting autoantibodies are
  • transient
  • of low affinity
  • IgM primarily

12
Forbidden Clone Theory
  • There is a correlation between Tscell deficiency
    and the development of autoantibodies. Normally
    Tscells prevent the activation of these
    nontolerant clones of lymphocytes.

13
Background
  • The detection and semi-quantitation of
    autoantibodies aid in the diagnosis of autoimmune
    disease.
  • Laboratories have used indirect fluorescent
    antibody (IFA) procedures to detect
    autoantibodies since 1957.
  • In these procedures, a fluorescein conjugated
    AHG serves as a marker for an antigen-antibody
    binding reaction which occurs on a substrate
    surface.
  • IF-ANA is commonly used as a screening test for
    certain autoimmune disorders.

14
Background
  • Autoantibodies Found in SLE and Other Autoimmune
    Disorders
  • Anti-DNA
  • Double-stranded (native) DNA (dsDNA)
  • Single-stranded DNA (ssDNA)
  • Antinucleoprotein (soluble nucleoprotein sNP
    DNA-histone)
  • Antibasic nuclear proteins (histones)
  • Antiacidic nuclear proteins (extractable nuclear
    antigens ENAs includes Smith Sm and
    ribonucleoproteinRPN)
  • Nuclear glycoprotein
  • Ribonucleoprotein (RNP)
  • Sjogrens syndrome A and B (SS-A Ro and SS-B)
  • Antinucleolas (nuclear RNA)

15
Background
  • This test should only be ordered for a patient
    who demonstrates the symptoms of systemic disease
    as some healthy individuals maintain low titers
    of ANAs yielding false positive results.

16
Uses
  • Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE)
  • Sjogrens syndrome
  • Scleroderma
  • Rheumatoid arthritis
  • CREST

17
(No Transcript)
18
Expected Results
19
Kallestad? QuantafluorSanofi Diagnostic Pasteur,
IncIF-ANA test kit
  • Materials provided
  • Substrate slide
  • Hep-2 (human epithelial cells)
  • 2-8C
  • Positive Control
  • Pooled human sera
  • Specific autoantibody activity
  • Liquid form
  • working dilution
  • 2-8C
  • Lyophilized form
  • working dilution upon reconstitution
  • -20C

20
Kallestad? QuantafluorSanofi Diagnostic Pasteur,
IncIF-ANA test kit
  • Materials provided
  • Negative Control
  • Pooled normal human sera
  • working dilution
  • 2-8C
  • Universal FITC conjugate
  • Fluorescein conjugated to AHG
  • 2-8C
  • Mounting media
  • polyvinyl alcohol
  • do not freeze
  • ambient temp

21
Kallestad? QuantafluorSanofi Diagnostic Pasteur,
IncIF-ANA test kit
  • Materials provided
  • Phosphate buffered saline
  • pH 7.3 ? 0.10
  • dibasic sodium phosphate
  • monobasic sodium phosphate
  • sodium chloride
  • ambient temp storage for crystalline form
  • prepared solution is good for 3 months at ambient
    temp
  • Evans Blue counter stain
  • ready to use in
  • ambient temp
  • Blotting strips
  • ambient temp

22
Materials required but not provided
  • 25 ?l calibrated micropette
  • Test tubes, 12 x 75 mm or 13 x 100 mm
  • Test tube rack
  • Humidity chamber
  • Staining dish
  • Magnetic stirrer (optional)
  • Plastic wash bottle
  • Glass cover slips, 24 x 60 mm
  • Distilled or deionized water
  • Fluorescent microscope

23
Specimen Collection
  • Serum recommended
  • Avoid grossly hemolyzed or lipemic samples
  • produce increased nonspecific background staining
    of the subtrate

24
Specimen Storage
  • Storage
  • up to 2 days _at_ 2-8C
  • freeze _at_ -20C for longer storage
  • avoid repeated thawing and freezing
  • NOTE If sample is to remain at RT (e.g. mailing)
    then add sodium azide
  • 1 mg/ml to preserve.

25
Procedure Step 1
  • Bring all reagents, materials and patient
    specimens to ambient temperature. (Approximately
    20 min)
  • Prepare a PBS wash for step 7 and a second PBS
    wash/Evans blue counter stain (if needed) for
    step 12.
  • In some assay kits the counter stain and the FITC
    conjugate are combined in a ready to use form.
  • Construct a humidity chamber.

26
Watch point Step 1
  • It is very important that the reagents are
    allowed to warm to RT.
  • As warmer reacting autoantibodies may be missed
    if reagents are not warmed to RT.
  • .

27
Procedure Step 2
  • Reconstitute controls and PBS with distilled
    water.
  • Buffer is made fresh weekly. Verify pH of buffer
    before each run.

28
Procedure Step 3
  • Prepare a 140 dilution (0.05ml patient 1.95ml
    PBS) for each specimen.

29
Procedure Step 4
  • Remove slide from foil bag. Place in humidity
    chamber. Immediately add 25 ?l controls or
    diluted test serum to the appropriate wells.

30
Watch point Step 4
  • Carefully open slide package. Handle by outer
    edge only so that the substrate is not damaged.
  • Each well must be entirely covered with control
    or diluted serum.
  • This is to prevent the slide from drying and
    artifact formation.

31
Procedure Step 5
  • Cover humidity chamber. Incubate slides _at_
    ambient temperature for 20 minutes.

32
Procedure Step 6
  • Rinse each slide briefly with a stream of PBS.

33
Watch point Step 6
  • Apply stream above the wells.
  • Wash each slide from the middle of the slide so
    that the stream is directed off of the side of
    the slide.
  • Do not apply the stream directly to the wells.

34
Procedure Step 7
  • Wash slides for 10 minutes in a staining dish
    filled with PBS. Gently agitate staining dish
    several times or use a magnetic stirrer during
    the wash.

35
Procedure Step 8
  • Remove each slide from staining dish and blot
    excess PBS from around the wells using blotting
    strips.

36
Watch point Step 8
  • Do not touch the strip to the
  • substrate wells.

37
Procedure Step 9
  • Place slides in humidity chamber and immediately
    dispense 25 ?l of FITC conjugate into each well.

38
Procedure Step 9 (modified)
  • In some kits the counter stain and the FITC
    conjugate solution are combined.

39
Procedure Step 10
  • Cover humidity chamber.
  • Incubate for 20 minutes
  • _at_ ambient temperature
  • in the dark.

40
Procedure Step 11
  • Rinse each slide briefly with a stream of PBS.

41
Procedure Step 12
  • Wash slides for 10 minutes in a staining dish
    filled with fresh PBS and 5-6 drops of Evans
    blue counterstain. During wash, turn on
    microscope.

42
Procedure Step 12
  • NOTE This wash step should also be set up in a
    dark place. Since the fluorescent dye has be
    added any UV exposure can result in quenching of
    the dye.

43
Procedure Step 12 (modified)
  • If kit being used combines the counter stain and
    the FITC conjugate, then this step is modified to
    include a wash step in PBS only for 10 minutes in
    the dark.

44
Procedure Step 13
  • Remove slides,
  • blot, and apply
  • 4 ?1 drops of
  • mounting media
  • per slide, making
  • sure to cover
  • all wells.
  • Add coverslip.

45
Watch point Step 13
  • Note If processing multiple slides, place
    slides in the humidity chamber until you are
    ready to evaluate each slide. Exposure to light
    will cause quenching of the fluorescent stain.

46
Quenching
  • Some fluorochromes (such as fluorescein) are
    photosensitive and are subject to photo-bleaching
    when exposed to intense excitation light.

47
Procedure Step 14
  • View under fluorescent
  • microscope in a dark room.
  • Evaluate each well for
  • presence or absence of
  • fluorescent staining using
  • the positive and negative
  • control wells as a
  • reference.

48
Procedure Step 15
  • Record results. If positive, also record the
    staining pattern.
  • All Positive results are rerun in serial
    dilutions up to
  • the disappearance of the positive result.
  • The final report, if the specimen is positive,
    must include the final dilution(s) and the
    staining pattern(s).

49
Procedure Step 15
  • Turn off the microscope.
  • Log the start time and end time of use.
  • As a part of quality control the bulbs are
    replaced every 200 hours or according to the
    manufacturers suggestion.

50
Interpretation of Results
  • Start by evaluating the positive and negative
    control wells.
  • The positive control should show a 3 homogenous
    bright apple green fluoresce pattern.
  • The negative control may be black with no green
    color or may show a dull green outline of some
    cells.
  • NOTE The green color in the negative control
    should be in great contrast the the bright green
    of the positive control.

51
Interpretation of Results
  • The test for autoantibodies is NEGATIVE if no
    specific pattern of fluorescence is observed on
    the substrate.
  • The test for autoantibodies is POSITVE when the
    Hep-2 substrate shows a specific pattern of
    fluorescence.

52
Interpretation of Results
  • The Hep-2 cells on each well are a mixture of
    cells in interphase (resting state) and in
    various stages of mitosis. Mitotic cells should
    be viewed during metaphase.
  • Metaphase-stage of mitosis in which the nuclear
    envelope breaks down and the chromatids line up
    in the center of the cell.

53
Interpretation of Results
  • If patient specimen is POSITIVE, then determine
    titer by serially diluting the sample and
    rerunning the test with these dilutions. The
    titer of the autoantibody is the highest dilution
    demonstrating a 1 specific fluorescence of the
    substrate.
  • When multiple patterns are present, determine the
    titer for each pattern separately.

54
Grading of Intensity
  • 4 Brilliant apple green color, clear cut
    outline,
  • sharply defined cell center
  • 3 Less brilliant fluorescence, clear cut cell
    outline,
  • sharply defined cell center
  • 2 Definite pattern but less fluorescence, cell
  • outline less well defined.
  • 1 Subdued fluorescence, subdued cell outline

55
ANA Patterns
  • HOMOGENEOUS (DIFFUSE)
  • RIM (PERIPHERAL)
  • SPECKLED
  • fine
  • coarse
  • CENTROMERE (DISCRETE SPECKLED)
  • NUCLEOLAR

56
Homogeneous Pattern
  • The nucleus stains evenly throughout. Within
    mitotic cells, the chromosomes stain as an
    irregularly shaped mass with more intensely
    stained outer edges. This pattern combination is
    suggestive of autoantobodies to nDNA, histones,
    or DNP.

57
Homogeneous Pattern
58
Rim (Peripheral) Pattern
  • The nucleus stains predominantly at its
    periphery. Within mitotic cells, the chromosomes
    may stain as an irregularly shaped mass with more
    intensely stained outer edges. This pattern
    combination is suggestive of autoantibodies to
    nDNA or DNA-histone complexes. If the mitotic
    cell chromosomes are negative, the rim nuclear
    pattern may be suggestive of autoantibodies to
    nuclear membrane and not to nDNA (significance
    unknown).

59
Speckled Patterns
  • Fine speckled
  • Numerous small uniform points of fluorescence
    scattered throughout the nucleus with distinct
    nuclear margins. Nucleoli appear as unstained
    patches in the speckled nucleus. Mitotic cell
    cytoplasm may retain fine speckling, while the
    mitotic cell chromosomes are negative.
  • Coarse or atypical speckled
  • Medium sized uniform points of fluorescence
    scattered throughout the nucleus with distinct
    nuclear margins. The mitotic cell chromosomes
    are negative.
  • Fine and coarse speckled patterns are suggestive
    of autoantibodies to Sm, RNP, Scl-70, SSA, SSB,
    or other undefined antigens.

60
Speckled Pattern
61
Centromere Specificity (Discrete Speckled)
  • Medium sized uniform points of fluorescence
    scattered throughout the nucleus with indistinct
    nuclear margins. In mitotic cells, the discrete
    speckles are clustered only in the chromosome
    mass. The specificity of the discrete speckled
    patterns is to the centromere and is highly
    correlated with the CREST syndrome of progressive
    systemic sclerosis.

62
Centromere Specificity (Discrete Speckled)
63
Nucleolar Pattern
  • Intense homogeneous staining of the nucleoli
    often associated with dull homogeneous
    fluorescence of the rest of the nucleus. Mitotic
    cell chromosomes are usually negative however,
    some nucleolar antibodies may react with the
    chromosomes. The mitotic cells do not possess
    distinct nucleoli. This pattern is suggestive of
    autoantibodies to 4-6s RNA.

64
Nucleolar Pattern
65
Interpretation of ResultsExpected Values
66
Expected Values
67
Futher testing
  • The autoantibody class can be determined by using
    class specific antisera. Fluorescein conjugated
    antisera monospecific for IgG, IgA and IgM are
    commercially available.
  • Not included in most kits
  • Special request by doctor

68
Direction of Further Testing
69
Limitations
  • Diagnostic aid only
  • Prozone reaction may be observed in some patients
  • Sera from patients undergoing successful therapy
    for autoimmune disorders may be negative for ANA

70
Limitations
  • ANA specificity cannot be determined by
    morphological staining pattern alone
  • Many drugs may induce ANA
  • IF-ANA is not useful for therapeutic drug
    monitoring

71
Specificity
  • The Hep-2 cells contain nuclear antigens.
  • The specificity of the Universal FITC Conjugate
    is confirmed by immunoelectrophoresis and reverse
    Radial Immunodiffusion.

72
Accuracy
  • The agreement between Kallestad Quntafluor test
    and Reference methods 96.4

73
Quality Control
  • Both a positive and negative control should be
    included with each run of the test.
  • Use only the components that are provided with
    the kit being used.
  • Microbially contaminated sera should not be used.

74
Quality Control
  • Verify pH of buffer before each run.
  • Use heat inactivated sera to avoid C1q
    interference in assay.
  • Replace bulb in fluorescent microscope as
    recommended by manufacturer.

75
Alternate Screening Tests
  • LE cell test
  • Enzyme conjugated immunoassay

76
LE cell test
  • First reasonable good test for lupus
  • Detects antibody against nuclear
    deoxyribonucleoprotein (DNP soluble
    nucleoproteinsNP, DNA-histone complex) that is
    produced in SLE.

77
LE prep technique
  • Uses laboratory-damaged cells, either tissue
    cells or WBCs as a source of nuclei
  • Nuclei are incubated with patient serum
  • Nuclear material is converted by the ANA against
    sNP into a homogeneous amorphous mass that stains
    basophilic with Wrights stain.
  • The mass is then phagocytized by nondamaged PMNs
  • These PMNs containing the hematoxylin
    (blue-staining) bodies in their cytoplasm are the
    so-called LE cells

78
Confirmatory tests
  • Ordered by Doctor
  • Screening test results confirmed by assaying for
    specific antibodies (anti-Sm, anti-dsDNA, etc.)
    using Radial immunodiffusion (RID), double
    diffusion, RIA, ELISA

79
Reflex or Cascade Testing
  • One practice that has become more common recently
    is reflex or cascade testing. In such examples,
    panels of test for various other autoantibodies
    are performed when an ANA result is positive.
    UMMC Special Chemistry Lab commonly runs a reflex
    test upon a positive ANA screen at the doctors
    request.
  • Potential problems with reflex testing include
    increased costs and erroneous diagnosis.
    Additional testing should be guided by specific
    clinical indications.

80
Reflex Test Panel Used at UMMC
  • Microtiter colorimetric ENA Panel
  • Sm
  • RNP
  • SSA
  • SSB
  • anti-DNA

81
Conclusion
  • Testing for antinuclear autoantibodies should be
    done selectively and only when suspicion for
    certain autoimmune disorders is high. When
    clinical suspicion is low, most positive results
    are false-positive and may lead to unnecessary
    additional testing, needless anxiety, and
    inappropriate treatment.

82
References
  • Turgeon, Mary L. Immunology and Serology in
    Laboratory Medicine. St. Louis Mosby 1996.
  • Kallestad? Quantafluor. Kit insert. Sanofi
    Diagnotics Pastuer, Inc. 1992
  • Antinuclear antibody. Kit insert. Sigma
    Diagnostics?. 1995
  • Lupus-like Disease available 4/04/01
  • http//www.infotech.demon.co.uk/MCTD.htm
  • Ravel. Clinical Laboratory Medicine, 6th ed.
    1995
  • available http//www.home.mdconsult.com
  • Postgraduate Medicine Symposium Rheumatologic
    Diseases
  • available http//www.postgradmed.com
  • Wiggers, Tom. Various handouts from Immunology
    and Serology
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com