* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Rheumatology_Laboratory_Talk
Sexually transmitted infection wikipedia , lookup
Hepatitis C wikipedia , lookup
Meningococcal disease wikipedia , lookup
Brucellosis wikipedia , lookup
Middle East respiratory syndrome wikipedia , lookup
Onchocerciasis wikipedia , lookup
Eradication of infectious diseases wikipedia , lookup
Leishmaniasis wikipedia , lookup
Chagas disease wikipedia , lookup
Leptospirosis wikipedia , lookup
Schistosomiasis wikipedia , lookup
Visceral leishmaniasis wikipedia , lookup
RHEUMATIC DISEASE LABORATORY TESTING BASICS OF LAB TEST ORDERING Intent: Establish a diagnosis Determine prognosis Monitor disease activity Indicate organ involvement Monitor stage of disease Indicate disease mechanisms Guide treatment Monitor toxicity Pitfalls: Misdiagnosis Permanent labeling of patient Needless additional testing Inappropriate therapy and/or referral Expense Overlooking the correct diagnosis NEEDLESS ANXIETY FOR PATIENT!!! BASICS OF LAB TEST ORDERING “We checked an ANA, ESR, & RF to look for connective tissue disease…..” TWO BY TWO TABLE DIS (+) DIS (-) TEST (+) A (TP) B (FP) PPV = A/A+B TEST (-) C (FN) D (TN) NPV = D/C+D SENS = SPEC = TP/TP+FN TN/FP+TN DISEASE PREVALENCE & PREDICTIVE VALUES SNOUT A test with high SeNsitivity is excellent For ruling OUT a dx… “SNOUT” Sensitivity is true pos over true pos plus false negatives SPIN A test with a high SPecificity is great for Ruling IN a dx “SPIN” Specificity is true negative over true negative plus false positive TYPES OF LABS 1. High sensitivity labs - SNOUT: good for “screening” or “ruling out” ESR (inflammation) ANA (lupus – but NOT “CTD”) 2. High specificity labs - SPIN: good for “diagnosing” or “ruling in” ds-DNA (lupus) Scl-70 (PSS) Jo-1 (ILD in polymyositis) C-ANCA (WG) TYPES OF LABS 3. Disease activity labs: How is treatment working ? CPK complement levels (lupus) ds-DNA (lupus) ESR, CRP (RA, GCA, PMR) 4. Prognosis labs: Should I be aggressive early with meds? RF (RA) ds-DNA antibody (SLE) Citrulline antibody (RA) “THE NET” – looking for organ damage and mimickers UA with micro glomerulonephritis CBC anemia chronic disease Lipids accelerated atherogenesis w/ inflammation Hep B & Hep C extrahepatic disease features. TSH CPK Chem Panel and LFT’s ? Vitamin D (fibromyalgia) ESR ESR The king of non-specific lab tests but very sensitive Infection / malignancy/CTD all raise the ESR Westergren method used at NMCSD (up to 120 mm/hr) Useful for “ruling out” systemic inflammatory disease ESR Non-inflammatory factors that raise ESR Aging Female Sex Obesity Pregnancy Anemia Markedly Low ESR (0 mm/hr) Afribinogenemia/dysfibrinogenemia Agammaglobulinemia Extreme polycythemia (HCT > 65) Increased plasma viscosity ESR Adjunctive Testing Good history and physical Repeat test 1-3 mo? Prior ESRs? CRP SPEP, Quantitative Immune Globulins Age Appropriate Malignancy Screen CRP (“Can’t refuse prednisone”) Produced as an acute-phase reactant by the liver in response to IL-6 and other cytokines Seen in sera of patients with pneumococcal pneumonia in 1930 (protein could precipitate C-polysaccharide of pneumococcus) Can recognize phosphocholine, other phospholipids Can activate complement (classic) Can bind to and modulate the behavior of phagocytic cells in both pro and anti-inflammatory ways Quicker rise and fall than ESR Sensitive but not diagnostic of any particular condition “CRP rises with infection and ESR rises with CTD’s….” (not always true!!!) Normal less than 1.0 mg/dl > 8-10 mg/dl, think bacterial infection, systemic vasculitis, or widely metastatic cancer CRP OTHER ACUTE PHASE REACTANTS Polyclonal Immunglobulins (SPEP) Alkaline phosphatase Transaminases Fibrinogen Haptoglobin Serum amyloid A Platelet count Ferritin Alpha-1 antitrypsin Decreased albumin (“negative” APR) COMPLEMENT A system of interacting serum proteins that function sequentially as initiators, regulators, and effectors of cell lysis and inflammation Provide innate defense against microbes and a “complement” to humoral immunity Biologic cascade in which, by limited proteolysis, one component activates the next, causing rapid and robust amplification of the system Critical to normal processing of immune complexes Causes host tissue damage in antibody-mediated autoimmune syndromes COMPLEMENT Measurement useful if: concern for inherited deficiency states which can pre-dispose to infectious and rheumatic syndromes immune-complex mediated disease COMPLEMENT COMPLEMENT CLASSICAL: ALTERNATIVE: Ag-Ab complexes such as SLE Endotoxin IgA Drugs COMPLEMENT COMPLEMENT REGULATION C1 inhibitor – [prevents C1s from activating C4 and C2] deficiency -> hereditary angioneurotic edema and chronic C4 activation/consumption with resulting low C4 C3 and C4 nephritic factors Autoantibodies against alternative and classical pathway C3 convertases, respectively Stabilizes antibody, increasing half-life causing excessive C3 cleavage Secondary deficiency of C3 ROUTINE COMPLEMENT LEVEL TESTING CH 50 C3 useful screen for BOTH classic and alternative pathways C4 reflects a functionally intact classic pathway; good screen for deficiency state (C1-9) depressed with activation of classic pathway or in patients with angioneurotic edema C5-9 terminal attack complex DIMINISHED COMPLEMENT LEVELS partial or complete inherited deficiency C1q inhibitor deficiency -> hereditary angioedema and low C4 C2 or C4 deficiency -> SLE C3 deficiency -> recurrent infections (bacterial) C5a inhibitor deficiency -> FMF C5-9 deficiency -> recurrent neisserial infxn immune complex consumption (SLE / post-strep GN, cryoglobulinemia, SBE, membranoproliferative GN, Sjogren’s, other vasculitides) RHEUMATOID FACTOR RHEUMATOID FACTOR Hemagglutinating activity noted in 1940, associated with RA in 1949 Heterogeneous family of IgM abys directed against IgG RF response transiently associated with many infectious diseases (TB, SBE, syphillis, HCV) RF response more permanent with chronic diseases 1-4% of healthy whites, 10-25% age > 70 , 30% some NA Indians 80% of RA pts (+) 80-90% of SS (+) 70% of chronic HCV (+) Both Types II and III cryoglobulins worse prognosis and more aggressive RA Not specific for RA No correlation with RA disease activity RHEUMATOID FACTOR RHEUMATOID FACTOR Elevated RF (ChRONIC immune stimulation) Ch- chronic disease (esp hepatic and pulmonary) R- rheumatoid arthritis O- other connective tissue disease N- neoplasms (lymphoproliferative diseases, esp after XRT, chemo) I – Infections C - cyroglobulins ANTI-CITRULLINE AB ELISA available against CCP (cyclic citrullinated peptide) – one of the antifilaggrin antibodies Very specific, not very sensitive (SPIN) Utility may be in defining early and aggressive RA, prior to development of RF Useful in RF (+) positive conditions that mimic RA Sjogren’s Hep C cryoglobulinemia ANA ANA’s are directed against a variety of nuclear antigens in serum of patients with/without rheumatic disease as well as in normal persons The ANA IS NOT a useful screen for rheumatic disease (nor is the RF) not sensitive enough (SNOUT) not specific enough (SPIN) The ANA IS a useful screen for SLE is very sensitive-95% (SNOUT) Offers less in area of specificity (SPIN) ANA many false positives 5% of healthy controls pos at 1:160 dilution 10-15% of healthy controls pos at 1:80 dilution 30% of healthy controls pos at 1:40 dilution positive with SBE / age / liver disease / thyroid dz should be done on HEp2 cell line pattern is important and helps w/ dx titer doesn’t correlate with disease activity a negative ANA “rules out” SLE most of the time ANA TESTING Pre-test ANA Assessment Low < 1:80 likelihood > 1:160 Moderate < 1:80 likelihood > 1:160 Your Action High likelihood Fill out consult to Rheum Disease specific antibodies negative positive Ignore Observe; look elsewhere Observe; look elsewhere Disease specific antibodies ANA PATTERNS RIM SPECKLED HOMOGENEOUS NUCLEOLAR ANA PATTERNS NUCLEOLAR Against RNA Nonspecific Associated with PSS PM-DM SLE vasculitis RIM or PERIPHERAL Against DNA Specific for SLE Should trigger check for ds-DNA SLE More active disease Nephritis ANA PATTERNS CENTROMERE Associated with CREST Calcinosis Raynaud’s Esophageal Dysmotility Sclerodactyly Telangeictases ANA PATTERNS HOMOGENEOUS Against DNA & histone Nonspecific Associated with SLE Drug induced lupus RA Vasculitis PM-DM SPECKLED Against the various ENA’s “More” specific-SPIN Associated with SLE Sjogren’s PSS PM-DM RA SPECIFIC ANA’s ds-DNA Nearly 100% specific for SLE Correlates well with disease activity Probably pathogenic Moderate Sensitivity SPECIFIC ANA’s Smith (Sm) RNA/protein complex involved in processing messenger RNA More severe disease Speckled ANA Higher prevalence in AA & Asians Moderate sensitivity (30%) Highly specific for SLE SPECIFIC ANA’s RNP (U1 RNP) Ribonucleoprotein Speckled ANA Diagnostic of MCTD if: High titer No other ENA’s Features of SLE, PM, RA, and PSS RF (+) HISTONE High sensitivity and low specificity Drug induced lupus gives anti-histone alone SLE gives antihistone along with ds-DNA Also seen in RA SPECIFIC ANA’s Ro/SS-A Protein-RNA complex found in both nucleus and cytoplasm Sjogren’s and lupus The rare ANA-neg lupus Subacute cutaneous lupus (a very photosensitive lupus) Neonatal SLE and congenital heart block La/SS-B Protein-RNA complex found in both nucleus and cytoplasm Sjogren’s and lupus The rare ANA-neg lupus May protect against renal disease Usually also have antibodies to Ro/SS-A Ro/SS-A & La/SS-B SPECIFIC ANA’s SCL-70 Anti-topoisomerase I Found in 20% of patients with PSS VERY specific NOT sensitive Lung disease Associated with nucleolar ANA pattern Jo-1 Anti-histidyl tRNA synthetase A cytoplasmic protein Found in 30% of PM/DM patients – often with lung involvement/ILD Highly specific CRYOGLOBULINS CRYOGLOBULINS A group of serum Ig’s with conformational change in the cold: Precipitate or gel on cold exposure Phenomenon reversible with rewarming Found in variety of clinical situations Other labs: RF, low complement, QIG, ESR TYPE I TYPE II (essential) Single monoclonal Ig or light chain “mixed” – a monoclonal directed against polyclonal IgG (rheumatoid factor activity) TYPE III “polyclonal” – no monoclonal Ig also RF activity CRYOGLOBULINS Type I (myeloproliferative disorders) Type II Myeloma, lymphoma, Waldenstrom’s Infections (majority HCV and some HBV), CTD (Sjogren’s, lupus), Type III CTD, Infection lymphoproliferative disorder CRYOGLOBULINS “Essential mixed cryoglobulinemia” is now recognized as driven by chronic Hep C in most cases. Clinical features: Acrocyanosis / digital necrosis (type I) Palpable purpura (type II and III) Livedo reticularis Raynaud’s Arthritis / GN / peripheral neuropathies HLA B-27 Class I MHC cell surface marker found in 6-8% of NA whites, 3-4% of NA AA’s, 18-50% of Haida Indians 90-100% of AS pts/lesser frequency in other spondyloarthropathies NOT a “screening” test for the SNSA’s IBD-associated arthritis – 50% Ankylosing spondylitis (AS) – 90% Reactive / Reiter’s – 80% Psoriatic arthritis – 50% w/ spine; 15% peripheral HLA B-27 ANTIPHOSPHOLIPID AB’s lupus anticoagulant 1. 2. 3. 4. anticardiolipin antibodies prolonged PTT or PT or final common pathway (DRVVT) Failure to correct by mixing patient plasma w/ nml plasma Correction with addition of excess phospholipid or platelets Ruling out other coagulopathies via ELISA antibodies against beta-2 glycoprotein Via ELISA NEJM 7 Mar 2002 ANCA C-ANCA and P-ANCA Originally defined by indirect IF staining of neutrophils C-ANCA Cytoplasmic IF pattern P-ANCA Perinuclear IF pattern ANCA (“C3PO”) C-ANCA Ab against PR3 (proteinase-3) (found in neuts/monos) Wegener’s granulomatosis C-ANCA usually found in widespread WG C-ANCA seen less frequently with limited WG Correlates with dz activity in 60% of cases P-ANCA Ab against MPO (myeloperoxidase), elastase, lactoferrin, others Churg-Strauss MPAN Crescentic GN (pauciimmune GN) Drug-induced (PTU, minocycline, hydralizine) IBD SLE / RA/HIV No correlation with disease activity ARTHROCENTESIS NORMAL/NONINFLAMMATORY (0-2,000 WBC) INFLAMMATORY (2,000-60,000 WBC) Transparent / < 25% POLYS osteoarthritis / AVN / sympathetic effusion Translucent / > 50% POLYS RA / SLE / crystal / spondyloarthropathies PURULENT (80,000-100,000 WBC) Infection / predominantly POLYS SUMMARY No lab test is as good as your history and physical exam No lab test “screens” for CTD’s Disease pattern recognition is far more helpful than any serology or test Know the SENS and SPEC of lab tests for different diseases Say “NO” to laboratory panels QUESTIONS!!!