TY - JOUR T1 - Determination of anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide antibodies in the sera of patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis. JF - The Journal of Rheumatology JO - J Rheumatol SP - 1829 LP - 1833 VL - 31 IS - 9 AU - Jason M Low AU - Anil K Chauhan AU - Daniel A Kietz AU - Umar Daud AU - Peri H Pepmueller AU - Terry L Moore Y1 - 2004/09/01 UR - http://www.jrheum.org/content/31/9/1829.abstract N2 - OBJECTIVE: Anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide (anti-CCP) antibodies have been found in sera of 76% of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), mainly in rheumatoid factor (RF) positive patients, with a specificity of 96%. We evaluated the presence of anti-CCP antibodies in patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) and assessed the possibility of synthetic citrullinated peptides as antigenic determinants in JIA. METHODS: The presence of anti-CCP antibodies was determined using 3 synthetic citrullinated peptide variants and 2 commercial kits (Inova Diagnostics and Axis-Shield Diagnostics) optimized for detecting JIA-specific antibodies in serum by an ELISA based assay. We evaluated 66 patients with JIA (16 RF positive polyarthritis, 18 RF negative polyarthritis, 19 oligoarthritis, and 13 systemic arthritis). We also tested 9 adult RA patients, 34 patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), and 25 healthy persons as controls. RESULTS: Significant concentrations of anti-CCP antibodies were detected in the majority of RF positive JIA patients with polyarthritis. Using the 2 synthetic linear peptides, 12/16 (75%) were positive; 9/12 (75%) were positive with the Inova kit and 9/10 (90%) were positive with the Axis-Shield kit. However, utilizing the synthetic linear peptides, significant concentrations of anti-CCP antibodies were detected in 51/66 (77%) JIA patients, including 15/18 (83%) RF negative polyarthritis, 16/19 (84%) oligoarthritis, and 8/13 (62%) systemic arthritis patients. No healthy control showed elevated antibody levels. In contrast, 4/9 (44%) patients with adult RA and 2/6 (33%) with SLE had elevated anti-CCP levels. The synthetic cyclic variant cfc-1-cyc yielded significant anti-CCP levels for 13/14 (93%) patients with RF negative polyarthritis, 6/10 (60%) with oligoarthritis, and 3/7 (43%) with systemic arthritis, and 8/9 (88%) RF positive patients. No healthy control had increased anti-CCP levels. However, 4/9 (44%) adult RA and 9/34 (26%) SLE patients were found to have elevated anti-CCP levels. Using the Inova and Axis-Shield kits, much smaller percentages were found in the RF negative patients, with only 4/16 (25%) in the oligoarthritis and RF negative polyarthritis patients with the Inova kits and 0/25 (0%) by the Axis-Shield kits. The Inova kit revealed elevated anti-CCP antibodies in 5/9 (56%) adult RA patients and in 8/34 (24%) SLE patients. No healthy control had elevated anti-CCP antibodies. However, the Axis-Shield kits did not detect anti-CCP antibodies in adult RA (0/9) or SLE (0/34) patients. Moreover, 0/25 (0%) healthy individuals exhibited anti-CCP levels. The presence of anti-CCP antibodies correlated more frequently with the presence of RF. CONCLUSION: This study confirms the presence of anti-CCP antibodies in patients with JIA, especially those with RF positive polyarthritis, by all ELISA based methods. Use of synthetic peptides also revealed anti-CCP antibodies in a percentage of RF negative patients with polyarthritis, oligoarthritis, and systemic arthritis; there was a loss in specificity, but an increase in sensitivity. These results suggest that antibodies to these antigenic peptides may be markers for JIA, and indicate a possible role of citrulline-containing epitopes in the pathogenesis of JIA. ER -