Plasma Antiretinal Autoantibody Profiling and Diagnostic Efficacy in Patients With Autoimmune Retinopathy
Authors
Seok Hyun Bae ; Hye Kyoung Hong ; Jong Young Lee ; Min Seok Kim ; Christopher Seungkyu Lee ; Min Sagong ; Sook Young Kim ; Baek-Lok Oh ; Young Hee Yoon ; Jae Pil Shin ; Young Joon Jo ; Kwangsic Joo ; Sang Jun Park ; Kyu Hyung Park ; Se Joon Woo
Citation
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF OPHTHALMOLOGY, Vol.245 : 145-154, 2023-01
Purpose: To evaluate plasma antiretinal autoantibody (ARA) profiling and diagnostic efficacy for autoimmune retinopathy (AIR).
Design: A multicenter, diagnostic evaluation study.
Methods: Forty-nine patients with a clinical diagnosis of AIR, disease controls including 20 patients with retinitis pigmentosa (RP), and 30 normal controls were included. Plasma samples from patients were analyzed for the presence of 6 ARAs, including recoverin, α-enolase, carbonic anhydrase II, heat shock protein 60, aldolase C, and cone-rod homeobox/cone-rod retinal dystrophy 2 using western blotting.
Results: Autoantibody detection rates against cone-rod homeobox/cone-rod retinal dystrophy 2, heat shock protein 60, and aldolase C in AIR were 67.3%, 40.8%, and 42.9%, respectively, which were higher than those in RP and normal controls (P < .001, P < .001, and P = .007, respectively), but recoverin, α-enolase, and carbonic anhydrase II were not different from other control groups (P = .117, P = .774, and P = .467, respectively). Among ARAs, antirecoverin antibody was the most specific, as it was found in 3 (6.1%) patients with AIR and none of the control groups. As the number of detected ARAs increased, the probability of AIR increased (odds ratio: 1.913; P < .001; 95% confidence interval: 1.456-2.785). The positive number of ARAs was significantly higher when photoreceptor disruption was observed on optical coherence tomography, or severe dysfunction was observed in electroretinography (P = .022 and P = .029, respectively).
Conclusions: The profiles of ARAs in the AIR group were different from those in the RP and normal controls. The higher number of positive ARAs suggests a higher possibility of AIR diagnosis. ARAs should be used as adjunct tools for the clinical diagnosis of AIR.