Objective. The anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide (anti-CCP) enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) has high sensitivity and specificity for rheumatoid arthritis (RA). However, detection of anti-CCP in patients with active pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) has recently been reported. To determine whether this activity was specific for the citrullinated residue, the specificity of anti-CCP-positive sera for CCP versus that for unmodified arginine-containing peptide (CAP) was examined in patients with TB and compared with that in patients with RA.Methods. Anti-CCP and anti-CAP in sera from patients with pulmonary TB (n ؍ 49), RA patients (n ؍ 36), and controls (n ؍ 18) were tested by ELISA. Sera were available at diagnosis from most TB patients. All TB patients were treated with a combination of 2-4 antibiotics for at least 6 months, and sera were collected over time.Results. Anti-CCP was found in 37% of TB patients and in 43% of RA patients. CAP reactivity was more common in TB than in RA. High anti-CCP:anti-CAP ratios (>2.0) were seen far more commonly in anti-CCP-positive RA patients than in anti-CCPpositive TB patients (94% versus 22%). Anti-CCP was inhibited by CCP peptide in sera from RA patients, but not in sera from TB patients. A slight increase in anti-CCP was common after initiating treatment for TB, although the anti-CCP level decreased after 1-2 months.Conclusion. Anti-CCP is frequently present in patients with active TB. However, many anti-CCPpositive TB sera also reacted with CAP, and anti-CCP: anti-CAP ratios in TB sera were low. Anti-CCP:anti-CAP ratios should be useful clinically for distinguishing CCP-specific reactivity seen in RA from reactivity with both CCP and CAP frequently seen in pulmonary TB.
Objective-Anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide (CCP) antibodies are a serological marker for rheumatoid arthritis (RA); up to 10%-15% of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) are also positive. While anti-CCP in RA is citrulline-dependent, anti-CCP in some other diseases is citrulline-independent and reacts with both CCP and the unmodified (arginine-containing) cyclic arginine peptide (CAP). We investigated the citrulline dependence of anti-CCP and its significance in the arthritis of SLE.Methods-IgG anti-CCP was compared by ELISA to anti-CAP in sera from patients with SLE (n = 335) and RA (n = 47) and healthy controls (n = 35). SLE patients were divided into 5 groups based on their joint involvement: subset I: deforming/erosive arthritis (n = 20); II: arthritis fulfilling (or likely fulfilling) American College of Rheumatology criteria for RA but without erosions (n = 18); III: joint swelling but not fulfilling RA criteria (n = 39); IV: arthritis without documented joint swelling (n = 194); and V: no arthritis (n = 58).Results-Anti-CCP (> 1.7 units) was found in 68% (32/47) of patients with RA and 17% (55/329) of those with SLE. It was more common in SLE patients with deforming/erosive arthritis (38%). High anti-CCP (> 10 units) was found in RA (26%) and deforming/erosive SLE (12%). High anti-CCP/CAP ratios (> 2, indicating a selectivity to CCP) were found in 91% of anti-CCP-positive RA and 50% of anti-CCP-positive SLE patients with deforming/erosive arthritis. Patients from subset II did not have high anti-CCP/CAP. Conclusion-Citrulline dependence or high levels (> 10) of anti-CCP were common in SLE patients with deforming/erosive arthritis, while most anti-CCP in SLE patients was citrullineindependent. This may be useful in identifying a subset of SLE patients with high risk for development of deforming/erosive arthritis.
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