Title: Common Rheumatologic Tests: Evaluation and Interpretation
1Common Rheumatologic Tests Evaluation and
Interpretation
- Beth Valashinas, D.O.
- Chief Rheumatology Fellow
- University of North Texas Health Science Center/
Plaza Medical Center
2Disclosures
3Introduction
- Immunologic laboratory testing in rheumatology is
useful for supporting or refuting a clinically
suspected diagnosis - Shotgun approaches or screening tests often
lead to false positives, and further unnecessary
workups/referrals
4Background
- Defining attributes of a test
- Sensitivity
- Specificity
- Positive predictive value
- Negative predictive value
- Likelihood ratios
- Pretest and posttest probabilities
5Attributes of a test
- Sensitivity
- Proportion of patients with a disease who have a
positive test result - Specificity
- Proportion of patients without a disease who have
a negative test result - Both sensitivity and specificity are independent
of disease prevalence
6Attributes of a test
- Predictive value
- likelihood of disease or lack thereof based on a
positive or negative test result - Negative predictive value (NPV)
- True negative/(true negative false negative)
- Positive predictive value (PPV)
- True positive/(true positive false positive)
7Predictive value
- Predictive value is significantly affected by
disease prevalence - Predictive value of a positive rheumatologic test
in patient with polyarthralgias is likely to be
higher in a rheumatology practice than in a
family physicians office - As pretest probability increases, so does the
clinical utility of a specific test
Lane, SK and Gravel, JR. American Family
Physician. 656,1073,2002.
8Attributes of a test
- Likelihood ratio
- LR for a negative test result
- (1-sensitivity)/specificity
- LR for a positive test result
- sensitivity/(1-specificity)
9Likelihood ratio
- Provides additional measure by allowing
calculation of posttest probability based on
pretest probability and test result - Decision to use a test should be based upon
whether posttest probability will be
significantly different from the pretest
probability given a positive or negative test
result
ACR AD HOC Committee. Arthritis Care and
Research. 47429, 2002.
10Attributes of a test
- If a test has a high positive likelihood ratio
(e.g., 10), and the test result is positive, then
the posttest probability of the test will be
greatly increased - If the likelihood ratio is only 1, then no
difference would be expected between pretest and
posttest probabilities
11Performance characteristics of specific ANAs
Colglazier, CL et al. Southern Medical
Journal.2005
12Acute phase reactants
- Heterogeneous group of proteins synthesized in
liver in response to inflammation - Fibrinogen
- Haptoglobin
- C-reactive protein
- Alpha-1-antitrypsin
13Acute phase protein response
Adapted from Gitlin JD, Colten HR in Pick E,
Landy M eds Lymphokines.14123,1987.
14Common markers of inflammation
- ESR
- Measures distance (in mm) that RBCs fall within
specified tube (Westergren or Wintrobe) over 1
hour - Indirect measure of changes in acute-phase
reactants and quantitative Igs - Decreases by 50 in 1 week after inflammation
resolves
15Mechanism of elevated ESR
- If higher concentration of asymmetrically charged
acute-phase protein or hypergammaglobulinemia
occurs, dielectric constant of plasma increases
and dissipates inter-RBC repulsive forces, leads
to closer aggregation of RBCs, so they fall
faster, and cause ESR elevation
Hobbs, K in West, S. Rheumatology Secrets,2002
16Noninflammatory conditions with elevated ESR
- Aging
- Female sex
- Obesity
- Pregnancy
17Rule of thumb
- Age-adjusted upper limit normal for ESR
- Male age/2
- Female (age 10)/2
18Causes of markedly elevated ESR
- ESR 100
- Infection, bacterial (35)
- CTD (GCA, PMR, SLE, vasculitides (25)
- Malignancy lymphomas, myeloma, etc (15)
- Other causes (25)
Hobbs, K in West, S. Rheumatology Secrets,2002.
19Causes of extremely low ESR
- ESR 0mm/hr
- Agammaglobulinemia
- Afibrinogenemia/dysfibrinogemia
- Extreme polycythemia (Hematocrit 65)
- Increased plasma viscosity
20Approach to elevated ESR
- Complete HP
- Routine labs (CBC, CMP, UA)
- Up-to-date cancer screening/health maintenance
- Repeat ESR
- If still elevated without other association
- Consider SPEP, CRP
- Recheck in 1-3 months (up to 80 normalize)
21C-reactive protein (CRP)
- Pentameric protein
- Trace concentrations in human plasma
- Highly conserved over hundreds of millions of
years of evolution - Properties of recognition and activation
- Activates classic complement pathway
- Modulates behavior of phagocytic cells (both
inflammatory and non-inflammatory influence)
22CRP
- Acute phase reactant produced by liver
- Response to IL-6, other cytokines
- Rises and falls quickly
- Elevation within 4 hr of tissue injury
- Peak at 24-72 hr
- Half-life 18 hr
23Rule of thumb
- CRP
- CRP 0.2-1.0 mg/dL indeterminate (may be seen in
smoking, DM) - CRP 1.0 mg/dL inflammatory
- Levels 10mg/dL suggest bacterial infection (up
to 85), or possibly systemic vasculitis,
metastatic cancer
Morely JJ, et al. Ann N Y Acad Sci389,1982.
24Serum protein electrophoresis (SPEP)
- Quantifies the acute-phase response
- Increase in alpha-1 and -2 zones (alpha-1
antitrypsin and haptoglobin) - Increase in beta-gamma area (fibrinogen and CRP)
- Decrease in pre-albumin, albumin, and the beta
zone (transferrin)
25Normal SPEP
erl.pathology.iupui.edu/LABMED/IMAGES/SPE_16A.JPG
26SPEP- acute inflammation
erl.pathology.iupui.edu/LABMED/IMAGES/SPE_16A.JPG
27SPEP- Polyclonal gammopathy
erl.pathology.iupui.edu/LABMED/IMAGES/SPE_16A.JPG
28Antinuclear antibodies (ANA)
- Initial LE test in 1940s
- Incubate bare nucleus with pts serum, allowing
ANAs to bind to nucleus - Then add normal PMNs and if sufficient Ab have
bound to nucleus, nucleus is opsonized and PMNs
engulf the material - LE cell is PMN containing phagocytosed nucleus
29LE Cell
30Current ANA measurement
- Fluorescence microscopy
- HEp-2 cells (derived from human epithelial tumor
cell line) incubated with pts serum - Fluoresceinated Ab added, binds to pts Abs bound
to nucleus - Amount of ANA determined by dilution of the pts
serum - the greater the dilution (titer) at which
nuclear fluorescence detected, the higher the ANA
concentration
31ANA
- Arbitrary definition of positive ANA is the level
that exceeds that seen in 95 of the population - Titers usually positive at 140 to 180
- Clinically significant titers (with HEp-2 cells)
1160
32ANA
- High sensitivity in SLE, but poor specificity
- Positive ANA has predictive value of only 11
(positive LR 2.2) - ANA found in 5-10 of pts without CTD
- Healthy pts, chronic infections (e.g., Hep C),
multiple meds, etc.
33ANA
- Condition
- SLE
- Drug induced lupus
- MCTD
- Autoimmune liver dz
- Sjogrens syndrome
- Polymyositis
- RA
- ANA-positive
- 99
- 95-100
- 95-100
- 60-100
- 75-90
- 30-80
- 30-50
Adapted from Hobbs, K in West, S Rheumatology
Secrets, 2002.
34ANA
- Condition
- Multiple sclerosis
- Pts with silicone breast implants
- Healthy relatives of pts with SLE
- Neoplasms
- Normal elderly (70 yrs)
Adapted from Hobbs, K in West, S. Rheumatology
Secrets, 2002
35ANA
- Is the ANA a good screening test for SLE?
- If 5 of normal U.S. population has positive
ANA, then over 12.5 million normal people in
U.S. are ANA positive - Prevalence of SLE is only 1/1000, so only
250,000 individuals with SLE and positive ANA - If entire population was screened, more normal
individuals would be detected with positive ANA
than SLE pts. by 501
Hobbs, K. in West, S Rheumatology Secrets. 2002..
36ANA
- Clinical value of ordering an ANA test can be
dramatically enhanced when there is a reasonable
pre-test probability of an autoimmune disease
37ANA patterns
- Homogeneous (diffuse)
- SLE, drug-induced SLE, other diseases
38ANA patterns
- Rim (peripheral)
- SLE, autoimmune hepatitis
39ANA patterns
- Speckled
- SLE, MCTD, Sjogrens, Scleroderma, other dz
40ANA patterns
- Nucleolar
- Scleroderma, hepatocellular carcinoma
41ANA patterns
- Centromere
- Limited scleroderma (CREST)
42Drug-induced ANAs
- Common drugs that cause positive ANAs
- Procainamide
- Hydralazine
- Phenothiazines
- Diphenylhydantoin
- Isoniazid
- Quinidine
43Lupus or ANA profile
- If screening ANA is positive and additional info
needed to further delineate type of autoimmune
disease - In extremely rare instances, ANA may be negative
but SS-A antibodies may be detected in pts. with
an SS-A associated disease
44Lupus Profile
Hobbs, K. in West, S Rheumatology Secrets. 2002.
45Lupus Profile
- Antibodies to dsDNA are associated with lupus
nephritis, and often parallel disease activity - Antibodies to SS-A/Ro and SS-B/La are commonly
associated with Sjogrens syndrome - Anti-Ro/SSA antibodies increase risk for neonatal
lupus/congenital heart block (CHB), especially
when in conjunction with anti-La/SSB Ab - Overall risk is 5
46Antibodies to ribonuclear protein (RNP)
- Target is spliceosomal snRNPs in nucleoplasm
- Seen in SLE, scleroderma, mixed connective tissue
disease (MCTD) - High levels very suggestive of MCTD
- MCTD is overlap disease with features of SLE,
scleroderma, and polymyositis
47Anticentromere and SCL-70 Ab
- Anticentromere Ab
- up to 98 pts with limited scleroderma (CREST)
- 22-36 pts with diffuse scleroderma
- Anti-SLC70 (anti-topoisomerase I)
- 22-40 pts with diffuse scleroderma
- longer disease duration, association with cancer,
pulmonary fibrosis, digital pitting scars,
cardiac manifestations
48Anti-dsDNA Ab prior to Dx of SLE
- Serum from 130 SLE patients
- 55 had anti-dsDNA Ab prior to SLE Dx
- Mean onset of Ab 2.7 years prior to Dx
- (range
- 58 of cases with at least 2 positive samples had
significant rise in anti-dsDNA within 6 months of
Dx
M. R. Arbuckle, et al. Scandinavian Journal of
Immunology 54 (1-2) , 211219.
49Evaluation of pt with positive ANA and
generalized arthralgias
- H P - any signs of CTD?
- If ANA titer 1160, consider lupus profile
- Other possible tests CBC, CMP, C3, C4, SPEP,
RF, ESR, UA, lupus anticoagulant, anticardiolipin
antibody
50Antiphospholipid antibodies
- Heterogeneous group of Ab that bind to plasma
proteins, have affinity for phospholipid surfaces - Anticardiolipin Ab (ACL)
- Lupus anticoagulant (LAC)
- Beta 2-glycoprotein I
51Antiphospholipid antibodies
- ACL measured by ELISA assay for IgG, IgM, and IgA
isotypes - LAC measured by phospholipid-dependent screening
test, if prolonged, add 11 mix with normal
plasma - if no correction, LAC present - Beta 2-glycoprotein I measured by ELISA
52Antiphospholipid antibodies
- Conditions with positive aPL
- 8 normal population
- chronic infections e.g., HIV, Hep C
- Medications e.g., phenothiazines, hydralazine,
phenytoin, procainamide, quinidine - 20 pts. with systemic vasculitis
- 15 pts. with recurrent miscarriage
- 50 pts. with SLE
Hansen, KE. in West, S Rheumatology Secrets,
2002.
53Antiphospholipid antibodies
- 50 pts. with SLE and aPL will develop a
thrombotic event - 3-7 pts. per year who have aPL will experience
a new thrombotic event - Overall positive predictive value of an aPL for
future CVA, venous thrombosis, or recurrent MC is
between 10-25
Hansen, KE. in West, S. Rheumatology Secrets,
2002.
54Cryoglobulins
- Immunoglobulins that precipitate in cold
temperatures - May cause hyperviscosity or vasculitis
- Symptoms include fatigue, arthralgias/arthritis,
cutaneous vasculitis or purpura, neuropathies,
visceral organ involvement, and digital ischemia
55Cryoglobulins
- Type I- Monoclonal Ig (IgG or IgM)
- Lymphoproliferative disorders
- Type II- Monoclonal IgM directed against
polyclonal IgG - Majority associated with Hepatitis C
- Type III- Mixed polyclonal IgG and IgM
- Connective tissue diseases, chronic infections
56Anticytoplasmic Antibodies
- Often more helpful in diagnosis than antibodies
against nuclear antigens - Seen with multiple autoimmune diseases and
several forms of vasculitis
57Anticytoplasmic antibodies
Hobbs, K. in West, S. Rheumatology Secrets.
2002.
58Anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic Antibodies (ANCA)
- C-ANCA
- Most commonly seen in Wegeners granulomatosis,
microscopic polyarteritis, rarely Churg-Strauss
vasculitis -
59ANCA
- P-ANCA
- seen in multiple diseases as well as vasculitis
-
60P-ANCA
- MPO positive
- Microscopic polyarteritis
- Pauci-immune GN
- Churg-Strauss vasculitis
- Drug-induced syndromes
- MPO negative
- Ulcerative colitis
- Autoimmune disease
- HIV
- Chronic infections or neoplasms (rare)
61ANCA
- If pt. tests positive to ANCA, evaluation of
specific antigen testing for MPO and PR3 should
be undertaken - If C-ANCA is not against PR3 or P-ANCA is not
against MPO, must consider causes other than
vasculitis
62Rheumatoid factor
- Autoantibody directed against the Fc (constant)
region of an IgG molecule - Multiple isotypes, including IgM, IgG, IgA, and
IgE - IgM RF is routinely measured using latex
agglutination titers, nephelometry, and ELISA
63Rheumatoid factor
- Very low levels normal, but higher production
secondary to chronic immune stimulation - RF positive in 80 of patients with RA
- Multiple other causes of positive RF
64Conditions associated with a positive rheumatoid
factor
- Rheumatologic diseases
- RA (80-85)
- Sjogrens (75-95)
- MCTD (50-60)
- Scleroderma (20-30)
- Sarcoidosis (15)
- Polymyositis (5-10)
- Non-rheumatologic conditions
- Chronic hepatitis
- Pulmonary disease
- Neoplasms
- Aging
- Cryoglobulinemia
- (40-100)
- Infections
- AIDS, Mono, TB, syphilis, parasites, endocarditis
Adapted from Kathryn Hobbs, from Rheumatology
Secrets, 2002, p.60.
65Frequency of RF positivity in normal population
- AGE
- 20-60 years
- 60-70 years
- 70 years
- Frequency of RF
- 2-4
- 5
- 10-25
Adapted from Kathryn Hobbs in West, S.
Rheumatology Secrets, 2002.
66Anti-CCP antibodies
- ELISA assay based on filaggrin from human skin or
synthetic citrullinated peptides - Target amino acid in filaggrin is citrulline, a
post-translationally modified arginine residue - High specificity and moderate sensitivity for RA
67Anti-CCP antibodies
- Sensitivity 68 for RA
- Specificity 98 for RA
- Can be seen in active TB, other CTD
- Clinical implications
- Predictive of more aggressive disease with more
progressive joint damage
68Early antibody production as indicator of future
disease?
- Longitudinal study of 79 RA patients
- 50 produced anti-CCP Ab and/or IgM-RF prior to
onset of disease - Positive results occurred median of 4.5 years
(range 0.1-13.8) before symptom onset - Elevated levels of either IgM-RF or anti-CCP may
imply high risk for development of RA
M. J. Nielen, et al. Arthritis Rheum 50380, 2004.
69Complement
- Cascade of proteins activated by many agents,
including immune or antigen-antibody complexes - May be decreased due to
- Increased consumption (proteolysis)
- Increased levels of circulating immune complexes
activate classical pathway - Decreased production
- Hereditary deficiency or liver disease
70Hereditary complement deficiencies
- May see SLE-like disease with deficiencies in
C1-C4 - Terminal complement (C5-9) deficiencies lead to
recurrent infections - Deficiency in C1 INH leads to angioedema
(hereditary or acquired)
71Diseases associated with low complement levels
- Rheumatic diseases
- SLE, systemic vasculitis, cryoglobulinemia,
- RA (rare)
- Glomerulonephritis
- Post streptococcal and membranoproliferative
- Infectious diseases
- Bacterial sepsis, SBE, Hepatitis B, other
viremias, parasitemias
72Complement level assessment
- C3 and C4 generally decreased with increased
disease activity in SLE - Decreased levels may predict impending disease
flares - C4 lowers before C3 and remains lower longer
- CH50 not useful as disease activity marker
73Serum uric acid levels
- Age- and sex-dependent
- Concentration levels rise with puberty in males
and menopause in females - Age of onset
- Peak for males 40-50 years
- Peak for females 60 years
74Serum uric acid levels
- Hyperuricemia
- 7.0 mg/dL in males
- 6.0 mg/dL in females
- 24 hour urine collection
- Urate 800 mg/24 hrs suggests overproduction
- Urate
75Serum uric acid levels
- Important considerations
- Only 15 of pts. with hyperuricemia develop gout
- If uric acid level10mg/dL, risk increases to
30-50 - In 10 of patients with acute gout, serum uric
acid levels are normal - Need joint aspiration and polarized light
microscopy to diagnose with certainty
76Asymptomatic hyperuricemia
- Treatment indications
- Acute overproduction e.g., tumor lysis syndrome
- Severe hyperuricemia e.g., uric acid levels
12mg/dL - Risk of uric acid nephrolithiasis is 50
77HLA-B27
- Sensitivity
- 95 for AS
- 80 for Reactive Arthritis
- 70 for SpA associated with psoriasis
- 50 for SpA associated with IBD
- 70-84 for uSpA
Shmerling RH. Geriatrics5122, 1996.
78HLA-B27
- Specificity
- Low given prevalence is 8 in Caucasian
population - In patients with inflammatory back pain, HLA-B27
positivity yields - 20-fold increased risk of SpA
- 15-fold higher risk of radiological sacroiliitis
Braun J, et al. Arthritis Rheum4158, 1998.
79Synovial fluid analysis
- Studies to perform
- Gram stain and culture
- Total leukocyte count with differential
- Polarized microscopy
80Synovial fluid analysis
Adapted from Spencer, RT in West, S. Rheumatology
Secrets, 2002
81Synovial fluid analysis
- Noninflammatory joint effusions
- OA, joint trauma, mechanical derangement, AVN
- Inflammatory synovial fluid
- Multiple rheumatic disorders
- Infectious arthritis
- Pyarthrosis
- Joint sepsis
- Pseudosepsis in gout, reactive arthritis or RA
82Polarized light microscopy
Adapted from Spencer, RT in West, S. Rheumatology
Secrets, 2002
83CPPD and MSU crystals
84Conclusions
- Immunologic laboratory tests facilitate diagnosis
and provide information regarding specific
disease manifestations, disease activity and
prognosis - Clinical utility of laboratory evaluation can be
enhanced by the employment of evidence-based
guidelines - A thorough history and physical examination
remain the best screening and diagnostic tools -
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