Abstract

BackgroundThe aim of the study was to assess the correlation of commonly used laboratory tests with clinical activity, degree of kidney involvement and treatment of systemic small-vessel vasculitis with the presence of ANCA antibodies.MethodsThe study included 28 patients with active AAV (BVAS ≥ 3). The following tests were performed: MPO-ANCA, PR3-ANCA, peripheral blood count, ESR, CRP, procalcitonin, creatinine, GFR, urea, albumin, fibrinogen, d-dimer, components of the C3 and C4 complement systems, urinalysis with sediment evaluation and diurnal proteinuria. The assessments were conducted twice: at study entry (A0) and after 6 months (A6) (BVAS = 0).ResultsAt the time of inclusion in the study, the mean creatinine concentration was 3.39 mg/dl (GFR 33.17 ml/min/1.73 m²), after achieving remission in 11 patients (39.3 %) GFR remained below 30 ml/min/1.73 m², 4 patients (14.3 %) continued renal replacement therapy, and 3 patients (10.7 %) with advanced renal failure died. Microscopic hematuria occurred in 80.9 % of the studied population, withdrew in most patients, strongly correlated with renal involvement p < 0.001 and was not related to disease severity p = 0.147. CRP, ESR, fibrinogen, d-dimer, albumin and hemoglobin in the peripheral blood showed a strong correlation with the clinical activity of AAV and well identified severe patients. High procalcitonin concentrations correlated with a severe form of the disease, pulmonary involvement with respiratory failure and alveolar hemorrhage (mean 3.41 ng/ml, median 0.91 ng/ml, SD 7.62, p = 0.000), and were associated with the occurrence of infectious complications and the need to administer antibiotic therapy. ANCA antibodies were useful in the evaluation of patients with AAV, the amount of antibodies did not correlate with the severity of vasculitis (p = 0.685) and the results in many patients did not match the expected assumptions.ConclusionsCRP, ESR, fibrinogen, d-dimers, albumin and hemoglobin in the peripheral blood correlate well with the activity of vasculitis and identify severe patients. The resolution of microscopic hematuria suggests remission of the disease in the renal area. Procalcitonin may be slightly increased in patients with active AAV without infection, high concentrations are strongly associated with infectious complications. ANCA antibodies should always be interpreted in the context of the observed clinical symptoms.

Highlights

  • ANCA associated vasculitis (AAV) is associated with necrotic inflammation in the wall of small arteries, veins and capillaries [1, 2]

  • Procalcitonin may be slightly increased in patients with active AAV without infection, high concentrations are strongly associated with infectious complications

  • The present study shows that ANCA antibodies were still detected in the serum in 52 % of patients after 6 months of treatment despite the absence of disease activity (BVAS v3, Birmingham Vasculitis Activity Score (BVAS)/WG = 0 pts)

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Summary

Introduction

ANCA associated vasculitis (AAV) is associated with necrotic inflammation in the wall of small arteries, veins and capillaries [1, 2]. We observe an incomplete correlation of test results with the condition of a patient and the intensity of involvement of various organs. This applies, in particular, to the markers of inflammation, i.e. peripheral blood leukocytosis, ESR, CRP, or the amount of ANCA antibodies. The objective of the study was to assess the correlation of commonly used laboratory tests with clinical activity, degree of renal involvement and treatment of systemic small-vessel vasculitis with the presence of ANCA antibodies. The aim of the study was to assess the correlation of commonly used laboratory tests with clinical activity, degree of kidney involvement and treatment of systemic small-vessel vasculitis with the presence of ANCA antibodies

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