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Clinical and Serological Features of Patients Referred through a Rheumatology Triage System because of Positive Antinuclear Antibodies

BACKGROUND: The referral of patients with positive anti-nuclear antibody (ANA) tests has been criticized as an inappropriate use of medical resources. The utility of a positive ANA test in a central triage (CT) system was studied by determining the autoantibody profiles and clinical diagnoses of pat...

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Autores principales: Fitch-Rogalsky, Christie, Steber, Whitney, Mahler, Michael, Lupton, Terri, Martin, Liam, Barr, Susan G., Mosher, Dianne P., Wick, James, Fritzler, Marvin J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3976309/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24705829
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0093812
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author Fitch-Rogalsky, Christie
Steber, Whitney
Mahler, Michael
Lupton, Terri
Martin, Liam
Barr, Susan G.
Mosher, Dianne P.
Wick, James
Fritzler, Marvin J.
author_facet Fitch-Rogalsky, Christie
Steber, Whitney
Mahler, Michael
Lupton, Terri
Martin, Liam
Barr, Susan G.
Mosher, Dianne P.
Wick, James
Fritzler, Marvin J.
author_sort Fitch-Rogalsky, Christie
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The referral of patients with positive anti-nuclear antibody (ANA) tests has been criticized as an inappropriate use of medical resources. The utility of a positive ANA test in a central triage (CT) system was studied by determining the autoantibody profiles and clinical diagnoses of patients referred to rheumatologists through a CT system because of a positive ANA test. METHODS: Patients that met three criteria were included: (1) referred to Rheumatology CT over a three year interval; (2) reason for referral was a “positive ANA”; (3) were evaluated by a certified rheumatologist. The CT clinical database was used to obtain demographic and clinical information and a serological database was used to retrieve specific ANA and/or extractable nuclear antigen (ENA) test results. Clinical information was extracted from the consulting rheumatologist's report. RESULTS: 15,357 patients were referred through the CT system; 643 (4.1%) of these because of a positive ANA and of these 263 (40.9%) were evaluated by a certified rheumatologist. In 63/263 (24%) of ANA positive patients, the specialist provided a diagnosis of an ANA associated rheumatic disease (AARD) while 69 (26.2%) had no evidence of any disease; 102 (38.8%) had other rheumatologic diagnoses and 29 (11%) had conditions that did not meet AARD classification criteria. Of ANA positive archived sera, 15.1% were anti-DFS70 positive and 91.2% of these did not have an AARD. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first study to evaluate the serological and clinical features of patients referred through a CT system because of a positive ANA. The spectrum of autoantibody specificities was wide with anti-Ro52/TRIM21 being the most common autoantibody detected. Approximately 15% of referrals had only antibodies to DFS70, the vast majority of which did not have clinical evidence for an AARD. These findings provide insight into the utility of autoantibody testing in a CT system.
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spelling pubmed-39763092014-04-08 Clinical and Serological Features of Patients Referred through a Rheumatology Triage System because of Positive Antinuclear Antibodies Fitch-Rogalsky, Christie Steber, Whitney Mahler, Michael Lupton, Terri Martin, Liam Barr, Susan G. Mosher, Dianne P. Wick, James Fritzler, Marvin J. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: The referral of patients with positive anti-nuclear antibody (ANA) tests has been criticized as an inappropriate use of medical resources. The utility of a positive ANA test in a central triage (CT) system was studied by determining the autoantibody profiles and clinical diagnoses of patients referred to rheumatologists through a CT system because of a positive ANA test. METHODS: Patients that met three criteria were included: (1) referred to Rheumatology CT over a three year interval; (2) reason for referral was a “positive ANA”; (3) were evaluated by a certified rheumatologist. The CT clinical database was used to obtain demographic and clinical information and a serological database was used to retrieve specific ANA and/or extractable nuclear antigen (ENA) test results. Clinical information was extracted from the consulting rheumatologist's report. RESULTS: 15,357 patients were referred through the CT system; 643 (4.1%) of these because of a positive ANA and of these 263 (40.9%) were evaluated by a certified rheumatologist. In 63/263 (24%) of ANA positive patients, the specialist provided a diagnosis of an ANA associated rheumatic disease (AARD) while 69 (26.2%) had no evidence of any disease; 102 (38.8%) had other rheumatologic diagnoses and 29 (11%) had conditions that did not meet AARD classification criteria. Of ANA positive archived sera, 15.1% were anti-DFS70 positive and 91.2% of these did not have an AARD. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first study to evaluate the serological and clinical features of patients referred through a CT system because of a positive ANA. The spectrum of autoantibody specificities was wide with anti-Ro52/TRIM21 being the most common autoantibody detected. Approximately 15% of referrals had only antibodies to DFS70, the vast majority of which did not have clinical evidence for an AARD. These findings provide insight into the utility of autoantibody testing in a CT system. Public Library of Science 2014-04-04 /pmc/articles/PMC3976309/ /pubmed/24705829 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0093812 Text en © 2014 Fitch-Rogalsky et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Fitch-Rogalsky, Christie
Steber, Whitney
Mahler, Michael
Lupton, Terri
Martin, Liam
Barr, Susan G.
Mosher, Dianne P.
Wick, James
Fritzler, Marvin J.
Clinical and Serological Features of Patients Referred through a Rheumatology Triage System because of Positive Antinuclear Antibodies
title Clinical and Serological Features of Patients Referred through a Rheumatology Triage System because of Positive Antinuclear Antibodies
title_full Clinical and Serological Features of Patients Referred through a Rheumatology Triage System because of Positive Antinuclear Antibodies
title_fullStr Clinical and Serological Features of Patients Referred through a Rheumatology Triage System because of Positive Antinuclear Antibodies
title_full_unstemmed Clinical and Serological Features of Patients Referred through a Rheumatology Triage System because of Positive Antinuclear Antibodies
title_short Clinical and Serological Features of Patients Referred through a Rheumatology Triage System because of Positive Antinuclear Antibodies
title_sort clinical and serological features of patients referred through a rheumatology triage system because of positive antinuclear antibodies
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3976309/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24705829
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0093812
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