Pattern Distribution and Utility of Reporting Anticellular Antibody Over Antinuclear Antibody: An Initial Report From the Immunofluorescence Laboratory of North Bengal Medical College and Hospital, West Bengal
Ushasi Banerjee, Arghya Chattopadhyay, Prasenjit Pal, Ivy Banerjee, Avishek Sengupta, Dhiman Sardar, Saheli Mukherjee, Utpal Biswas

TL;DR
This study shows that using anticellular antibodies (ACA) instead of antinuclear antibodies (ANA) improves detection of autoimmune diseases in patients who test negative for ANA.
Contribution
The study proposes replacing ANA with ACA in reporting to reduce false negatives in diagnosing autoimmune diseases.
Findings
60% of 973 patients tested positive for anticellular antibodies (ACA).
Isolated anticytoplasmic antibodies were more common in females of reproductive age.
ACA detection identified autoantibodies in ANA-negative patients, suggesting ACA is more effective for SARD diagnosis.
Abstract
Introduction: Antinuclear antibodies (ANA) are biomarkers used to diagnose, monitor, differentiate, and treat various systemic autoimmune rheumatic diseases (SARDs). The gold standard test for SARD screening involves using human epithelial cells (HEp-2) in an indirect immunofluorescence assay (IIFA) to detect ANA. However, diagnosing autoimmune disorders can be challenging when patients test ANA-negative but exhibit specific autoantibody patterns targeting the cytoplasm or mitotic spindle apparatus in the IIFA. To address this, the International Consensus on Antinuclear Antibody Patterns has proposed the term "anticellular antibodies" (ACA) to encompass various types of autoantibodies, including ANA. This study explores the rationale for shifting from reporting ANA to ACA in diagnosing SARDs. Materials and methods: An institutional observational study was conducted on 973 suspected and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMonoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies Research · Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Research · Immunodeficiency and Autoimmune Disorders
