Are anti-proteinase-3 ANCA a useful marker of granulomatosis with polyangiitis (Wegener's) relapses? Results of a retrospective study on 126 patients.

Journal: Autoimmunity Reviews
Published:
Abstract

Objective: Predicting granulomatosis with polyangiitis (Wegener's) (GPA) relapses based on ANCA titers remains a source of debate. Our objective was to evaluate the relevance of monitoring PR3-ANCA titers for GPA management.

Methods: This retrospective study included 126 patients fulfilling the 1990 ACR criteria for GPA and PR3-ANCA-positive at the time of diagnosis. Disease activity was assessed with BVAS/WG and Disease Extent Index. For each patient, a median of 12 serum samples was analyzed, i.e., one every 5.5months.

Results: Induction therapy obtained remission in 88% of the patients. ANCA became negative by IF for 70/115 (60.9%) patients and by ELISA for 90/115 (78.3%). After median follow-up of 70months, 85/126 (67.5%) patients had 154 clinical relapses associated with cANCA and PR3-ANCA-positivity for 122 (79.2%) and 102 (66.2%) of them, respectively. Relapse-free survival was significantly longer for patients who remained PR3-ANCA-negative (HR 0.60 [95% CI 0.39-0.92], P=0.02). Individual ANCA-profile analysis revealed that, for 60% of GPA patients, clinical outcomes and ANCA-titer changes were closely associated, i.e., ANCA were always positive during relapses and negative during remission. The 35 patients with fluctuating ANCA-positivity during remission were in partial remission or had developed grumbling GPA.

Conclusions: Although ANCA were positive during most systemic relapses or residual disease, no strict clinical-immunological correspondence was observed for 25% of the patients. Thus, GPA management cannot be based on ANCA levels alone.

Authors
Lan-huong Thai, Pierre Charles, Matthieu Resche Rigon, Kristell Desseaux, Loïc Guillevin