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Alveolar Bone Loss Is Associated With Circulating Anti-Citrullinated Protein Antibody (ACPA) in Patients With Rheumatoid Arthritis

Authors :
Paul G. Johnson
Marian J. Schmid
Ted R. Mikuls
Alan R Erickson
Jeremy Sokolove
Shawneen M. Gonzalez
Andreas M. Reimold
Fang Yu
Grant W. Cannon
Geoffrey M. Thiele
Jeffrey B. Payne
Gail S. Kerr
William H. Robinson
Source :
Journal of Periodontology. 86:222-231
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Wiley, 2015.

Abstract

This study examines: 1) alveolar bone loss (ABL), a hallmark of periodontitis, in anti-citrullinated protein antibody (ACPA)-positive rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients versus control patients with osteoarthritis (OA); and 2) the association of ABL with RA disease activity and ACPA concentrations, including multiple antigen-specific ACPA.This multicenter case-control study includes 617 patients diagnosed with RA (n = 287) or OA (n = 330). Panoramic radiographs were taken; patients were categorized into low, moderate, or high tertiles based on mean percentage ABL. Serum ACPA was measured using second-generation anticyclic citrullinated peptide enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and a multiplex platform to assess distinct antigen-specific ACPA. A generalized linear mixed model for binary data was used to compare stratified ABL in RA versus OA patients. Associations of moderate and high ABL (versus low) with RA disease activity and severity measures were examined using multivariate regression. Antigen-specific ACPA responses were compared among ABL tertiles using significance analysis of microarrays.ACPA-positive patients with RA had a significantly higher mean percentage of sites with ABL20% compared with patients with OA (P = 0.03). After multivariate adjustment, greater ABL was significantly associated with higher serum ACPA concentration (P = 0.004), 28-joint Disease Activity Score (P = 0.023), health assessment questionnaire disability (P = 0.05), tender joint count (P = 0.02) and joint space narrowing scores (P = 0.05) among patients with RA. ACPAs targeting citrullinated vimentin and histone were significantly higher in moderate and high ABL groups versus low, regardless of smoking status (q0.1%).Greater ABL was associated with higher ACPA, consistent with findings at articular sites. ACPA targeting could provide novel insight into important linkages between RA and periodontitis.

Details

ISSN :
19433670 and 00223492
Volume :
86
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Periodontology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5df63b1514df2e49154599e3a1a745f3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1902/jop.2014.140425