Cunnane G, Grehan S, Geoghegan S, McCormack C, Shields D, Whitehead A S, Bresnihan B, Fitzgerald O
Department of Rheumatology, St. Vincent's University Hospital, Dublin, Ireland.
J Rheumatol. 2000 Jan;27(1):58-63.
Acute phase serum amyloid A (A-SAA) has been reported to be more sensitive than C-reactive protein (CRP) as a marker of disease activity. It may function in immune regulation and is linked to the development of secondary amyloidosis. We investigated the profile of A-SAA in early inflammatory arthritis and compared A-SAA with CRP and erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) in relation to diagnosis and disease activity.
Using a sensitive and specific ELISA, A-SAA was measured in the serum of 140 patients with early arthritis (disease duration 2 weeks to 24 mo, mean 6 mo). CRP was determined using a standard ELISA; ESR and clinical disease activity variables were also recorded.
Sixty-four patients had rheumatoid arthritis (RA), 19 psoriatic arthritis (PsA), 28 undifferentiated arthritis (UA), and 29 other forms of arthritis. A-SAA levels correlated with both CRP (r = 0.73, p = 0.0001) and ESR (r = 0.6, p = 0.0001). The magnitude of the A-SAA response was greater than either the CRP or ESR, and very high A-SAA levels were observed in disease as early as 2 weeks. Highest A-SAA concentrations occurred in RA (median 70.3 mg/l, maximum 1542) compared with the other groups (medians, PsA: 33 mg/l; UA: 12.3 mg/l; other arthritis: 11.2 mg/l), with values > 520 mg/l observed exclusively in RA. A-SAA, unlike CRP or ESR, could distinguish patients with a final diagnosis of RA from those who had persistent UA. In RA, A-SAA provided the strongest correlations with clinical measurements of disease activity. Clinical improvement was also best represented by A-SAA, while disease deterioration was associated with a significant increase in A-SAA values, but not CRP or ESR.
Compared with ESR or CRP, A-SAA correlates best with markers of disease activity, and in patients with recent onset arthritis, very high levels of SAA occur exclusively in RA. As A-SAA is sensitive to change and accurately reflects alterations in disease status, it is the best marker available for the assessment of inflammatory joint disease.
据报道,急性期血清淀粉样蛋白A(A-SAA)作为疾病活动的标志物比C反应蛋白(CRP)更敏感。它可能在免疫调节中发挥作用,并与继发性淀粉样变性的发展有关。我们研究了早期炎症性关节炎中A-SAA的情况,并将A-SAA与CRP和红细胞沉降率(ESR)在诊断和疾病活动方面进行了比较。
使用灵敏且特异的酶联免疫吸附测定法(ELISA),检测了140例早期关节炎患者(病程2周-24个月,平均6个月)血清中的A-SAA。使用标准ELISA法测定CRP;还记录了ESR和临床疾病活动变量。
64例患者患有类风湿关节炎(RA),19例患有银屑病关节炎(PsA),28例患有未分化关节炎(UA),29例患有其他形式的关节炎。A-SAA水平与CRP(r = 0.73,p = 0.0001)和ESR(r = 0.6,p = 0.0001)均相关。A-SAA反应的幅度大于CRP或ESR,并且在疾病早期2周就观察到非常高的A-SAA水平。与其他组相比,RA中A-SAA浓度最高(中位数70.3mg/l,最高1542)(中位数,PsA:33mg/l;UA:12.3mg/l;其他关节炎:11.2mg/l),仅在RA中观察到值>520mg/l。与CRP或ESR不同A-SAA可以区分最终诊断为RA的患者和患有持续性UA的患者。在RA中,A-SAA与疾病活动的临床测量相关性最强。临床改善也以A-SAA表现最佳,而疾病恶化与A-SAA值的显著增加相关,但与CRP或ESR无关。
与ESR或CRP相比,A-SAA与疾病活动标志物的相关性最佳,并且在近期发病的关节炎患者中,非常高的SAA水平仅出现在RA中。由于A-SAA对变化敏感并准确反映疾病状态的改变,它是评估炎症性关节疾病的最佳可用标志物。