antibodies to citrullinated proteins that show great specificity for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and have the potential to indicate which patients are likely to have destructive joint disease (1)
citrulline is the product of post-translational modification of protein-bound arginine, catalysed by peptidylarginine deiminase (PAD)
there is a high specificity of antibodies to citrullinated proteins for RA - also an association to RA related joint damage
as well as occurring during the terminal differentiation of keratinocytes, citrullination occurs during cell death and injury
a reproducible and readily available assay has been developed to detect antibodies (anticyclic citrullinated peptide - anti-CCP)
anti-CCP antibodies are produced locally within the joint of RA patients
use in RA
a very high proportion of patients with established RA have (predominately IgG) anti-CCP antibodies - up to 80% with RA are positive for anti-CCP. This compares with to finding anti-CCP in only 2-5% disease controls and 0-1% healthy controls
anti-CCP antibodies appear early in RA and can predate the clinical onset of disease by years - most, but not all, patients are also positive for RF
anti-CCP is associated with joint damage - this is the case even in those patients who are RF-negative. However anti-CCP is not associated with extraarticular features (unlike RF)
variation of levels with treatment of RA
the titre of anti-CCP does not fall with 'standard' anti-rheumatic therapy (unlike RF). There have however been reported significant falls in patients clinically responding to infliximab and to rituximab
anti-CCP has been reported to help distinguish between polymyalgia rheumatica and a polymyalgic onset of RA in elderly people
in children, anti-CCP has been reported in 13% of children with polyarticular juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) (with an association with DR4 positivity and erosive joint disease) - however anti-CCP is only detected in about 2% of other types of JIA
anti-CCP has also been reported in 8-10% of patients with psoriatic arthritis - again associated with severe joint damage
anti-CCP occurs in approximately 7% of patients with primary Sjögren's, often at high titre - however not necessarily associated with erosive joint disease.
there is study evidence that anti-CCP predicts RA in patients presenting with an as yet undifferentiated arthritis
in this context anti-CCP has a sensitivity ranging from 45-65% but uniformly high specificity and high predictive value
the specificity of anti-CCP for diagnosing RA is higher than rheumatoid factor (2)
Reference:
ARC. Topical Reviews - Rheumatic Diseases: Serological Aids to Early Diagnosis. February 2006.
Annotations allow you to add information to this page that would be handy to have on hand during a consultation. E.g. a website or number. This information will always show when you visit this page.