AI Article Synopsis

  • * A study analyzed 2741 patient samples for ANA, finding that 65.3% tested negative and identified specific cytoplasmic patterns in 3.4% of cases, with reticular patterns linked to primary biliary cholangitis and dense fine speckled patterns linked to systemic lupus erythematosus.
  • * The findings emphasize the need for better reporting of cytoplasmic patterns in autoimmune disease assessments, suggesting further research with larger patient samples is necessary.

Article Abstract

Antinuclear antibodies (ANA) are the most common biomarkers observed in autoimmune diseases. Cytoplasmic staining patterns on ANA-Hep-2 are gaining recognition but with scanty information about their clinical and diagnostic role. The aim is to assess the frequency of cytoplasmic ANA patterns in autoimmune diseases, and to evaluate their possible associations with clinical diagnoses and autoantibodies. This observational cross-sectional study was conducted by examining and/or reviewing ANA by indirect immunofluorescence assay during a 13-month period. This was followed by testing the group of patients with a positive cytoplasmic staining pattern (n = 92) using the Microblot-Array ANA plus for the presence of 44 specific autoantibodies. Out of 2741 samples, 1791 (65.3%) tested negative, 845 (30.9%) tested positive nuclear staining patterns, 56 (2.0%) positive solitary cytoplasmic staining patterns, and 49 (1.8%) positive mixed nuclear and cytoplasmic patterns. Ninety-two cases (3.4% of the total cases) were analyzed using Microblot-Array ANA plus, with reticular as the most frequent cytoplasmic pattern, followed by dense fine speckled. The most frequently associated disease with reticular pattern was primary biliary cholangitis (28.9%), and the most frequently detected autoantibodies were against M2 (66.7%). The most frequently associated disease with dense fine speckled pattern was systemic lupus erythematosus (69.4%), and the most frequently detected autoantibodies were against nucleosome (57.7%) and ribosomal P0 (53.8%). This study highlights the significance of reporting cytoplasmic staining patterns and their importance in assessment of autoimmune diseases. Larger cohort studies on treatment naïve patients are recommended.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12026-024-09551-zDOI Listing

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