Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Is there a blood test for Rheumatoid Arthritis? Part 1

Yes and no. There are at least four. But, actually, there is none. Allow me to explain…

Do the tests pass the tests?

What are the tests?

1) Rheumatoid Factor

For the last few decades, Rheumatologists have relied heavily enough upon the Rheumatoid factor test that it is part of the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) guidelines for diagnosis. However, many Rheumatoid Arthritis patients do not have high enough levels of this antibody to be considered “Rf positive.”

Those RA’ers are referred to as “seronegative.” Sometimes, I think they are considered the stepchildren of the RA community. Too often, they are initially told by their doctors that they do not even have Rheumatoid Arthritis. Of course, that makes it impossible for them to receive that “early aggressive treatment” which the ACR is now urgently recommending.

The Rheumatoid factor is actually only one of the antibodies which can be found in people with Rheumatoid Arthritis. I think it got to be the one called “Rheumatoid factor / Rf” because it was the first one identified. It is an antibody to immunoglobulin. It was discovered in 1940 using sheep blood cells.

Another problem with the Rf test is the number of false positives. At least 2% of the general population test Rf positive.

2) Anti- Cyclic Citrullinated Peptide

The anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide is another antibody (immune protein). It is directed against certain amino acids (peptides) containing citrulline. It is often called the anti-CCP.

The anti-CCP has excellent prognostic value because it is strongly associated with more aggressive forms of Rheumatoid Arthritis. This is also a more specific test, which means that, if it is present in the blood, there is a 90-95% probability that there is RA. And CCP antibodies are often present in blood years before symptoms develop. It could be used to pursue early diagnosis for the all-important “early treatment.”

3) Sed Rate

The erythrocyte sedimentation rate is also called the sed rate or the ESR. The sed rate is a simple screening test. Blood is allowed to settle in a test tube for one hour. The reading or “rate” is the number of millimeters of red blood cells that fall to the bottom of the tube in one hour.

The sed rate is considered an inflammatory indicator. High rates often correlate with inflammation. An extremely high sed rate is often the first indicator of a cancer tumor, for example. However, a sed rate itself is not diagnostic, so it usually leads to more tests.

Sed rates can be unreliable unless the blood is handled properly at all times. There are also several conditions other than inflammation which can influence the test results. High sed rates are considered strong indicators, but normal ones are less conclusive.

4) C-Reactive Protein

The C-reactive protein is often referred to as the CRP. This is also a non-specific marker of inflammation. High results indicate acute inflammation. CRP’s are also being used as a measure for heart disease.

However, many physical conditions can either raise or lower the CRP. The patient’s diet or medication regimen can alter a CRP result. There is also a more sensitive version of the CRP test, called the “high sensitivity C reactive protein assay.” (We will have much more on the CRP in the next post!)

Are these tests adequate?

Next time, we will look a bit deeper. Exactly how accurate are these tests? How many RA’ers fail them?

A few footnotes:

2 comments:

andrew said...

Thanks for the succinct info re. blood tests. I'm one the seronegative "stepchildren". Good thing that the ACR guidelines state that 4 out of 7 indicators should be present for a positive RA diagnosis. Positive blood tests do not need to be one of the 4 indicators. Perhaps the lack of positive tests in 30-40% of people with RA is because there are many types of RA. This may also be supported by myriad of symptoms in people. I wonder if researchers are working on other blood indicators? I look forward to your future posts on this topic!
Andrew

Anonymous said...

Thank you for putting in so much time and effort on giving us an easy-to-understand explanation regarding tests for RA.

I was fortunate that when I was diagnosed (in the late 80s) the RF showed up in my blood, first time. Later, it didn't ... and that's when the U.S. Army Internal Medicine doc I was seeing at the time told me that it often DIDN'T.

Today there are more tests, and by looking at them all, the docs can make a better and more sure diagnosis. They've come a very long way since the late 80s. It gives me hope for those RA sufferers who are younger -- the disease will, hopefully, be diagnosed more quickly and action taken more quickly, too.