Granulomatosis With Polyangiitis With And Without Antineutrophil Cytoplasmic Antibodies: A Case-Control Study

ANCA-negative GPA remains a diagnosis of exclusion. Clinical differences between patients with ANCA-negative vs ANCA-positive GPA have not been analyzed in sizable case-control studies, and the effects of ANCA-seroconversion from negative to positive are not well documented. A single-center, sex, an...

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Published in:Rheumatology (Oxford, England)
Main Authors: Moura, Marta Casal, Falde, Sam, Sethi, Sanjeev, Fervenza, Fernando C, Specks, Ulrich, Baqir, Misbah
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: England 27-07-2024
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Summary:ANCA-negative GPA remains a diagnosis of exclusion. Clinical differences between patients with ANCA-negative vs ANCA-positive GPA have not been analyzed in sizable case-control studies, and the effects of ANCA-seroconversion from negative to positive are not well documented. A single-center, sex, and age matched case-control study evaluated ANCA-negative vs ANCA-positive GPA from January 1, 1996, to December 31, 2015. Patients who experienced seroconversion were the subject of a case crossover study. Clinical data and outcomes were retrieved from electronic medical records. ANCA-negative GPA was identified in 110 patients; 65% were female; median age was 55 (IQR 39-65) years at time of diagnosis. Disease severity was milder in ANCA-negative GPA (BVAS/WG = 2 vs 6, p< 0.001). Mucous membranous/eye manifestations were more frequent in ANCA-negative GPA. General symptoms, pulmonary, and renal involvement were more frequent in ANCA-positive GPA. Patients with ANCA-positive GPA relapsed more over 60 months (21.8% vs.9.1%, p= 0.009) compared with ANCA-negative GPA and had shorter time to event (p= 0.043). Patients with general manifestations, BMI > 30kg/m2 and necrotizing granulomatous inflammation were more likely to relapse. The 16 patients who seroconverted into ANCA-positive during follow-up had higher mean BVAS/WG at time of diagnosis (p< 0.001) and increased incidence of relapses (p= 0.004) after seroconversion. Necrotizing granulomatous inflammation on biopsy in ANCA-negative GPA patients was identified as a risk factor for subsequent seroconversion to ANCA-positivity. Patients with ANCA-negative GPA have milder disease and a lower frequency of relapse than those with ANCA-positive GPA. ANCA appearance portended higher disease severity and an increased frequency of relapses.
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ISSN:1462-0324
1462-0332
1462-0332
DOI:10.1093/rheumatology/keae379