Abstract

Antinuclear antibodies (ANA) in blood serum remain the primary diagnostic screening test for systemic connective tissue diseases. This article presents recent literature findings concerning the utilization of ANA in clinical practice. Specifically, it focuses on interpreting analysis positivity, identifying clinically significant types of fluorescence, and categorizing ANA patterns according to specific nosologies. Recommendations for using the name HEp-2-IIF instead of ANA and reporting the results of indirect immunofluorescence analysis for antinuclear antibodies on HEp-2 cell substrates are described in a standardized way, presenting immunofluorescence patterns together with the nomenclature of antibodies and informing about the subsequent management of the patient. Changes made to pattern classification to distinguish between competent and expert level patterns and to improve the visual separation between nuclear and cytoplasmic HEp-2 patterns are discussed. The need for further study of the prevalence and clinical significance of rare ANA patterns, particularly those directed at the mitotic spindle apparatus (NuMA and MSA-2), is emphasized. Prospects for the study and use of autoantibodies against double-stranded DNA not only in diagnosis but also in the treatment of patients with SLE are noted. It was concluded that there is a need for further clinical research, collection, and arrangement of various models of HEp-2 IIF to facilitate the accurate determination of «criterion level» patterns, increase the possibilities of early diagnosis of rheumatological diseases, and improve the management tactics of patients in this category.

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