Clinical significance of anti-dsDNA antibody isotypes: IgG/IgM ratio of anti-dsDNA antibodies as a prognostic marker for lupus nephritis.

Abstract
The objective of this paper is to investigate the association between patterns of anti-dsDNA antibody isotypes and specific clinical manifestations (categorized in renal, musculoskeletal, cutaneous, hematological, pulmonary, neurologicaland cardiac). Sera of 202 systemiclupus erythematosus(SLE) patients, 33 patients suffering from other autoimmune diseases and 115 healthy blood donors were analysed for anti-dsDNA antibodies by IgG-, IgA- and IgM-specific ELISA, Farr-assay and CLIF. A subset of 24 SLE patients was investigated in a longitudinal study over a period of one to six years. Disease activity of 105 SLE patients was measured according to the ECLAM score. In the cohort of SLE patients 63% were positivefor the IgG class, 40% for the IgA and 57% for the IgM class specific anti-dsDNA ELISA. Sensitivity (79%) and specificity (99%) for the diagnosis of SLE appeared to be highest for the ELISA measuring all isotypes of anti-dsDNA antibodies. The concentrations of anti- dsDNA isotypesshowed a strong correlationwith disease activity. Analysing the relationship between IgG, IgA and IgM anti-dsDNA antibody isotypes and clinical manifestation, we found a significant associationof the IgM isotypewith cutaneousinvolvementand of the IgG isotypewith lupus nephritis. The IgG/IgM ratio of anti-dsDNA antibodies represented a significant parameter to distinguish patients with lupus nephritis from those without renal involvement. In the longitudinal study, a continuous ratio under 0.8 was associated with absence of renal involvement throughout the investigatedperiod. In conclusion, the evaluationof anti-dsDNA isotypesprovidesa diagnostictool to define subsets within SLE patients with different clinical manifestations. In particular, the IgG/IgM ratio of anti-dsDNA antibodies could be used as a prognostic marker for lupus nephritis during the course of the disease.