Longitudinal antinuclear antibody titers in systemic lupus erythematosus and other rheumatic diseases
Emily A. Littlejohn, Lingxuan Kong, Lu Wang, Emily C. Somers

TL;DR
This study explores how antinuclear antibody levels change over time in people with lupus and other rheumatic diseases, finding that these levels tend to decrease over time.
Contribution
The study reveals that ANA titers are more dynamic and decrease over time in patients with SLE and related diseases.
Findings
SLE patients had higher odds of positive ANA compared to other rheumatic disease patients.
ANA titer strength was significantly higher in SLE and rheumatic disease groups compared to controls.
ANA titers decreased over time in all groups, with measurable monthly declines.
Abstract
Antinuclear antibodies (ANAs) are a key feature of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and marker of subclinical autoimmunity. Little is known about longitudinal ANA titers in individuals from the general population or in predicting clinical disease course in persons with rheumatic diseases. We performed an exploratory analysis from an academic health system between 1999 and 2020 to assess intra-individual variation in ANAs longitudinally in persons with SLE, other ANA-associated rheumatic diseases, and ANA+ controls without rheumatic disease. Persons with SLE had a higher odds of positive ANA compared to those with other ANA-associated rheumatic diseases [OR 2.10, 95% CI (1.82, 2.43)] controlling for time and demographics (age, sex, race, ethnicity). Compared to ANA+ controls, the ANA titer strength was significantly higher for both the ANA-associated rheumatic disease (0.33 log units…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHistorical and Religious Studies of Rome · Classical Studies and Legal History · Byzantine Studies and History
