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Anti‐aquaporin‐4 antibodies in the context of assorted immune‐mediated diseases
Author(s) -
Dellavance A.,
Alvarenga R. R.,
Rodrigues S. H.,
Kok F.,
de Souza A. W. S.,
Andrade L. E. C.
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
european journal of neurology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.881
H-Index - 124
eISSN - 1468-1331
pISSN - 1351-5101
DOI - 10.1111/j.1468-1331.2011.03479.x
Subject(s) - medicine , transverse myelitis , neuromyelitis optica , myelitis , context (archaeology) , optic neuritis , multiple sclerosis , demyelinating disease , autoimmune disease , immunology , antibody , iif , pathology , autoantibody , spinal cord , paleontology , psychiatry , biology
Background and purposes:  Anti‐aquaporin 4 antibodies are specific markers for Devic‘s disease. This study aimed to test if this high specificity holds in the context of a large spectrum of systemic autoimmune and non‐autoimmune diseases. Methods:  Anti‐aquaporin‐4 antibodies (NMO‐IgG) were determined by indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) on mouse cerebellum in 673 samples, as follows: group I (clinically defined Devic’s disease, n  = 47); group II [inflammatory/demyelinating central nervous system (CNS) diseases, n  = 41]; group III (systemic and organ‐specific autoimmune diseases, n  = 250); group IV (chronic or acute viral diseases, n  = 35); and group V (randomly selected samples from a general clinical laboratory, n  = 300). Results:  MNO‐IgG was present in 40/47 patients with classic Devic’s disease (85.1% sensitivity) and in 13/22 (59.1%) patients with disorders related to Devic’s disease. The latter 13 positive samples had diagnosis of longitudinally extensive transverse myelitis ( n  = 10) and isolated idiopathic optic neuritis ( n  = 3). One patient with multiple sclerosis and none of the remaining 602 samples with autoimmune and miscellaneous diseases presented NMO‐IgG (99.8% specificity). The autoimmune disease subset included five systemic lupus erythematosus individuals with isolated or combined optic neuritis and myelitis and four primary Sjögren’s syndrome (SS) patients with cranial/peripheral neuropathy. Conclusions:  The available data clearly point to the high specificity of anti‐aquaporin‐4 antibodies for Devic’s disease and related syndromes also in the context of miscellaneous non‐neurologic autoimmune and non‐autoimmune disorders.

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