Clinical Significance of Autoantibodies against Neutrophil Cytoplasmic Components in Patients with Renal Disease

Abstract
The diagnostic significance of anticytoplasmic autoantibodies (ANCA) was studied in 71 renal patients. The ANCA test was positive in 67% of patients with Wegener’s granulomatosis (WG), in 35% of those with a simultaneous renal and respiratory tract disease but not diagnosed as WG and in 22% of patients with a renal disease associated with unspecific collagenosis/vasculitis. Among WG patients ANCA positivity clearly correlated with the presence of active renal disease. Interestingly, both ANCA-positive and -negative patients were encountered in the group with acute renal failure and acute extracapillary glomerulonephritis associated with diffuse pulmonary infiltrates. The diagnostic and clinical significance of the ANCA test in these cases remains for the present obscure. In the majority of the ANCA-positive renal patients with respiratory tract abnormalities, the antibodies showed diffuse cytoplasmic staining and were mostly of the IgG class, of both IgG and IgM classes in some cases and of IgG, IgM and IgA classes in 1 patient. In patients with unspecific vasculitis/collagenosis the level of ANCA was rather low, and the distribution of different isotypes resembled that of patients with respiratory symptoms. A certain isotype of ANCA or staining pattern did not mark out any clinicopathologic subgroup among the patients. Our findings indicate that the clinical picture of ANCA-positive patients varies considerably and the ANCA test may not be as specific a marker of WG as previously suggested.