TY - JOUR
T1 - Serum IL-7 as diagnostic biomarker for rheumatoid arthritis, validation with the EULAR 2010 classification criteria
AU - Burska, Agata N.
AU - Neilan, Jessica
AU - Chisman, Ruth E.
AU - Pitaksalee, Rujiraporn
AU - Hodgett, Richard
AU - Marzo-Ortega, Helena
AU - Conaghan, Philip G.
AU - West, Robert
AU - Emery, Paul
AU - Ponchel, Frederique
N1 - Funding Information:
Funding: This work was partly supported by IMI funded project BeTheCure no. 115142-2. Competing interests: none declared.
Publisher Copyright:
© Clinical and Experimental Rheumatology 2018.
PY - 2018/1/1
Y1 - 2018/1/1
N2 - Objective Despite the well-established value of currently used classification criteria for the early diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) there is a constant demand for novel biomarkers notably in autoantibody-negative patients. Interleukin 7 (IL-7) has been reported as a candidate diagnostic biomarker based on ACR-1987 criteria. However, clinical practice has moved to using the EULAR 2010 classification criteria. Therefore, to advance the use of IL-7 alongside the RA biomarker pipeline, we repeated the original study in a new cohort. Methods 255 patients were recruited. IL-7 was quantified by ELISA. Univariate and regression analyses were used to model RA diagnosis. Results 123 patients were diagnosed with RA (EULAR 2010) while 132 were classified as non-RA. In univariate analysis, RA was associated with autoantibodies and SE-positivity, higher joint counts, DAS28 (all p < 0.001) and CRP (p=0.024). IL-7 was lower in RA (p=0.05). Logistic regression analysis in 227 patients with complete data set confirmed IL-7 was the second best predictive marker (p=0.035) following SJC (p=0.007) with good model fit (AUROC=0.889). A second model investigated 147 ACPA-negative patients: lower IL7 was the second best predictive marker (p=0.075) behind SJC (p=0.013). Conclusion This study validates our previous results from a UK cohort using EULAR 2010 criteria although the predictive power associated with IL-7 is lower than in the study using ACR 1987 criteria (both French/UK cohorts). IL-7 remains a potential biomarker for ACPA-negative RA although further validation with larger numbers of ACPA-negative patients is still needed notably to translate these results into clinical applicability.
AB - Objective Despite the well-established value of currently used classification criteria for the early diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) there is a constant demand for novel biomarkers notably in autoantibody-negative patients. Interleukin 7 (IL-7) has been reported as a candidate diagnostic biomarker based on ACR-1987 criteria. However, clinical practice has moved to using the EULAR 2010 classification criteria. Therefore, to advance the use of IL-7 alongside the RA biomarker pipeline, we repeated the original study in a new cohort. Methods 255 patients were recruited. IL-7 was quantified by ELISA. Univariate and regression analyses were used to model RA diagnosis. Results 123 patients were diagnosed with RA (EULAR 2010) while 132 were classified as non-RA. In univariate analysis, RA was associated with autoantibodies and SE-positivity, higher joint counts, DAS28 (all p < 0.001) and CRP (p=0.024). IL-7 was lower in RA (p=0.05). Logistic regression analysis in 227 patients with complete data set confirmed IL-7 was the second best predictive marker (p=0.035) following SJC (p=0.007) with good model fit (AUROC=0.889). A second model investigated 147 ACPA-negative patients: lower IL7 was the second best predictive marker (p=0.075) behind SJC (p=0.013). Conclusion This study validates our previous results from a UK cohort using EULAR 2010 criteria although the predictive power associated with IL-7 is lower than in the study using ACR 1987 criteria (both French/UK cohorts). IL-7 remains a potential biomarker for ACPA-negative RA although further validation with larger numbers of ACPA-negative patients is still needed notably to translate these results into clinical applicability.
KW - Diagnostic biomarker
KW - Interleukin-7
KW - Rheumatoid arthritis
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M3 - Article
C2 - 28980908
AN - SCOPUS:85042150288
SN - 0392-856X
VL - 36
SP - 115
EP - 120
JO - Clinical and Experimental Rheumatology
JF - Clinical and Experimental Rheumatology
IS - 1
ER -