Serum calprotectin may reflect inflammatory activity in patients with active rheumatoid arthritis despite normal to low C-reactive protein

被引:0
作者
Jana Hurnakova
Hana Hulejova
Jakub Zavada
Martin Komarc
Lucie Andres Cerezo
Herman Mann
Jiri Vencovsky
Karel Pavelka
Ladislav Senolt
机构
[1] Institute of Rheumatology,Department of Rheumatology, First Faculty of Medicine
[2] Prague,Department of Methodology, Faculty of Physical Education and Sport
[3] Czech Republic,undefined
[4] Charles University in Prague,undefined
[5] Czech Republic,undefined
[6] Charles University in Prague,undefined
[7] Czech Republic,undefined
来源
Clinical Rheumatology | 2018年 / 37卷
关键词
Calprotectin; C-reactive protein; Inflammation; Rheumatoid arthritis;
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摘要
Approximately half of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) have normal C-reactive protein (CRP) levels. Calprotectin is a promising and likely more specific biomarker of disease activity than conventionally used acute phase reactants. We aimed to analyse the levels of serum calprotectin in RA patients with clinically active disease and with normal/low CRP. A total of 160 RA patients underwent clinical examination (DAS28-ESR and CDAI). The levels of calprotectin were analysed in patients with moderate to high disease activity with normal/low CRP levels and in 32 healthy subjects. The discriminatory capacity of calprotectin to identify clinically active patients in spite of normal/low CRP was assessed using ROC curves. Out of all RA patients, 74/160 (46.3%) were in remission or had low disease activity according to DAS28 and had normal/low CRP levels. However, 51/160 (32%) had normal/low CRP levels despite having moderate to high disease activity. In these patients, calprotectin levels were significantly higher than those in patients who had normal/low CRP and were in remission or showed low disease activity (2.7 ± 1.5 vs. 2.1 ± 1.2 μg/mL, p = 0.043), which differed from those in healthy subjects (2.7 ± 1.5 vs. 1.9 ± 1.2 μg/mL, p = 0.011). The discriminatory capacity for calprotectin to distinguish clinically active vs. inactive disease despite normal/low CRP using AUC of the DAS28 was 0.607 (95% CI 0.503 to 0.711, p = 0.043). The present study demonstrates that calprotectin may reflect inflammatory activity in RA patients where CRP fails to do so.
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页码:2055 / 2062
页数:7
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