Abstract

Due to the strong association between ankylosing spondylitis and Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA)-B27, accurate identification of HLA-B27 is important in the diagnosis of patients with suspected spondyloarthritides. For this study, we compared a high-resolution HLA-B typing method to the clinical flow cytometry and allele-specific PCR melting assays to determine clinical benefits of high-resolution testing. Residual clinical samples submitted for HLA-B27 testing by flow cytometry were tested by single-locus HLA-B genotyping using next-generation sequencing (NGS), and PCR with melting curve analysis, currently used as a reflex test for indeterminate flow cytometry results. Fifty out of the 51 samples (98%) positive by flow cytometry confirmed as HLA-B27 positive by PCR melting assay and by NGS. The sample that did not confirm was genotyped as HLA-B*07:02. All the samples negative by flow cytometry were confirmed as HLA-B27 negative by both PCR melting assay and NGS. For the group that was indeterminate by flow cytometry, 84.5% (n = 49) typed as positive for HLA-B27, while 15.5% (n = 9) were negative for HLA-B27 but positive for HLA-B*07:02. NGS was the only method able to distinguish between pathogenic and nonpathogenic HLA-B27 variants, in contrast to the flow cytometry or the PCR melting assays. Single-locus NGS is superior to flow cytometry and PCR melting assay for the unambiguous identification of HLA-B27 variants, and uniquely able to distinguish between pathogenic and nonpathogenic B27 alleles. Due to its high accuracy, it may be a feasible superior alternative to flow cytometry and traditional molecular methods for clinical HLA-B27 testing.

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