Journal of Clinical Medicine (Jan 2022)

Discordant Predictions of Extraglandular Involvement in Primary Sjögren’s Syndrome According to the Anti-SSA/Ro60 Antibodies Detection Assay in a Cohort Study

  • Geoffrey Urbanski,
  • Aline Gury,
  • Pascale Jeannin,
  • Alain Chevailler,
  • Pierre Lozac’h,
  • Pascal Reynier,
  • Christian Lavigne,
  • Carole Lacout,
  • Emeline Vinatier

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11010242
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
p. 242

Abstract

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Electrophoresis-derived techniques for anti-SSA/Ro60 KDa (anti-SSA) antibodies detection have been progressively replaced by methods using non-native antigens. We aimed to compare the patients’ phenotypes and the occurrence of extraglandular manifestations in primary Sjögren’s syndrome according to the method used to detect anti-SSA antibodies. Sera from patients with a diagnosis of pSS according to ACR/EULAR 2016 criteria between 2008 and 2017 were tested for anti-SSA antibodies using methods with non-native antigens (magnetic bead multiplex assay; line immunoassays) and one with native antigens (counterimmunoelectrophoresis (CIE)). The population was split into three groups according to anti-SSA antibodies status: absence (SSA−), presence in any method except for CIE (SSA+CIE−), and presence in CIE (SSA+CIE+). The patients in the SSA+CIE+ group (n = 70, 42.7%) were ten years younger and presented more immunological activity compared with both the SSA− (n = 80, 48.8%) and SSA+CIE− groups (n = 14, 8.5%). The SSA− and SSA+CIE− groups were poorly distinct. The presence of anti-SSA antibodies solely in CIE was significantly associated with the occurrence of extraglandular manifestations of pSS (HR = 4.45 (2.35–8.42)). Contrary to CIE, methods using non-native antigens to detect anti-SSA antibodies were unable to predict the occurrence of systemic expression of pSS.

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