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Test Performance in Systemic Sclerosis : Anti-Centromere and Anti-Scl-70 Antibodies - 10/09/11

Doi : 10.1016/S0002-9343(97)00023-5 
George Spencer-Green, MD, MS a, , David Alter, MD, MPH c, H. Gilbert Welch, MD, MPH b, d, fn1fn1
a Division of Rheumatology, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, New Hampshire, USA 
b Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, New Hampshire, USA 
c Department of Pathology Brown Medical School, Providence, Rhode Island, USA 
d Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, White River Junction, Vermont, USA 

*Spencer-Green, MD, Section of Connective Tissue Diseases, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, 1 Medical Center Drive, Lebanon, New Hampshire 03756.

Abstract

PURPOSE: To determine the sensitivity and specificity of anti-centromere (ACA) and anti-Scl-70 antibodies in systemic sclerosis (SSc).

METHODS: Four-hundred ninety-seven English language articles published from 1966 to 1994 were identified by structured MEDLINE search. Articles in which either ACA or anti-Scl-70 antibodies were measured in both SSc patients and a non-SSc control group were reviewed and rated using a previously published diagnostic testing scale. Reported sensitivity and specificity from each study was converted into a 2 × 2 table, and combined across studies to calculate summary rates for each antibody. Author’s clinical classification criteria for SSc served as the gold standard for disease diagnosis.

RESULTS: In 30 articles that fulfilled inclusion criteria, ACA were found in 441 of 1,379 SSc patients (sensitivity 32%, range 17% to 56%). This increased to 57% (332 of 585) in patients with the limited cutaneous, or CREST, subset of SSc (lcSSc). Anti-Scl-70 antibodies were found in 366 of 1,074 SSc patients (sensitivity 34%, range 3% to 75%), and this increased slightly to 40% in patients with the diffuse cutaneous form of SSc (dcSSc). Both antibodies were measured in 670 patients, and either test was positive in 58% (range 29% to 86%), but in only 3 patients were both antibodies present.

The specificity of each antibody was high, but varied by control group. ACA were present in 5% and anti-Scl-70 antibodies were present in 2% of patients with other connective tissue diseases, but fewer than 1% of disease free controls had either antibody present.

CONCLUSIONS: As individual diagnostic tests in SSc, both ACA and anti-Scl-70 antibodies are highly specific. Each performs somewhat better as discriminators of clinical subsets for patients in whom a diagnosis of SSc has already been established. Clinicians can rely on a positive test result as being specific in the detection of disease, but 40% of SSc patients are likely to have neither antibody present, and a negative result does not exclude the diagnosis. Measurement of these antibodies should be considered secondary to the clinical features when making a diagnosis of SSc.

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© 1997  Elsevier Science Inc. Reservados todos los derechos.
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Vol 103 - N° 3

P. 242-248 - septembre 1997 Regresar al número
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