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Extended autoantibody panel in Turkish patients with early-stage systemic sclerosis: Coexpressions and their influences on clinical phenotypes

  • Duygu Temiz Karadağ
  • , Andac Komac
  • , Yesim Erez
  • , Ahmet Merih Birlik
  • , Alper Sari
  • , Ali Akdoğan
  • , Bayram Farisogullari
  • , Gezmiş Kimyon
  • , Emrah Koc
  • , Didem Arslan
  • , Ahmet Karatas
  • , Suleyman Serdar Koca
  • , Nilgün Kasifoglu
  • , Ayten Yazici
  • , Kadir Mutlu Hayran
  • , Ayse Cefle
  • Kocaeli University
  • Dokuz Eylul University
  • Hacettepe University
  • Mustafa Kemal University
  • Cukurova University
  • Firat University
  • Osmangazi University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Background/Aim: To investigate the frequency and clinical relevance of an extended autoantibody profile in patients with systemic sclerosis (SSc). Materials and Methods: In this cross-sectional study, serum from 100 consecutive patients was subjected to indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) (HEp-20-10/primate liver mosaic) and Systemic Sclerosis Profile by EUROIMMUN to evaluate anti-nuclear antibodies (ANA) and autoantibodies against 13 different autoantibodies in patients with SSc less than 3 years. Results: Ninety-three of 100 patients were positive for ANA by IIF. Fifty-three patients showed single positivity, 26 anti-topoisomerase antibodies (anti-Scl70 ab), 16 anticentromere antibodies (ACAs), six anti-RNA polymerase III antibodies (anti-RNAPIII ab), one anti-Ku antibody, one anti-PM/Scl100 antibody, two anti-PM/Scl75 antibodies, one anti-Ro52 antibody, whereas 32 patients had multiple autoantibody positivities. Among classic SSc-specific autoantibodies, anti-Scl70 and anti-RNAPIII abs showed the highest cooccurrence (n = 4). One patient was simultaneously positive for anti-RNAPIII ab and ACA, and one was positive for ACA and anti-Scl70 ab. The clinical features were not statistically different between single and multiple autoantibody-positivity for classic SSc-specific autoantibodies (ACA, anti-Scl70 ab, and anti-RNAPIII ab), except for digital ulcer in the multiantibody positive ACA group (p =.019). Conclusion: Based on our results, coexpression of autoantibodies is not uncommon in SSc patients. Although autoantibodies specific to SSc in early disease show generally known clinical features, it remains to be investigated how the coexpression of autoantibodies will affect clinical presentation.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere1089
JournalImmunity, Inflammation and Disease
Volume11
Issue number12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2023

Keywords

  • autoantibody
  • immunoblot assay
  • indirect immunofluorescence assay
  • scleroderma-specific antibodies
  • systemic sclerosis

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