To the Editor:
The mechanisms underlying the strong association between rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and bronchiectasis were recently reviewed [1]. A literature review highlighted 289 reports of bronchiectasis associated with RA, with the respiratory symptoms preceding joint symptoms in 90% of the reports [2], strongly suggesting that the processes in bronchiectasis predispose to RA.
Rheumatoid factor (RF) and anti-cyclic citrullinated antibody (anti-CCP) are integral in the initiation of RA. A Danish study (n=9712) observed that the baseline IgM RF was predictive of a significant, six-fold increased risk of RA development if the RF was two- to four-fold above the normal range [3]. Likewise, a strongly positive anti-CCP test significantly increases the risk of RA (OR 25) [4].
Two studies have investigated RF in bronchiectasis [5, 6] with no studies to date investigating anti-CCP. In our BRAC RA (Bronchiectasis, Asthma, Control, Rheumatoid Arthritis) study, a prospective, multicentre, case–control, observational study was conducted to determine the relationship between bronchiectasis and RF and anti-CCP. Recruitment was completed over 12 months using identical methodology and reviewed by the same researcher (E. Perry) with full ethical approval (Integrated Research Application System approval number 12324; Health Research Authority, London, UK). All recruited bronchiectasis patients were under respiratory specialist care, and had high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) evidence of bronchiectasis and a history of two or more respiratory infections per year. Key exclusion criteria included inflammatory arthritis, tuberculosis or other forms of lung disease. Cystic fibrosis was excluded using genotyping and sweat testing following British Thoracic Society guidelines. Asthma patients were identified from a database where the diagnosis had been confirmed by expert review. Healthy controls were matched with the asthma patients, where possible, for smoking history, age and sex. Anti-CCP measurement was undertaken by ELISA assays including the EliA CCP second-generation ELISA kit (Phadia, Uppsala, Sweden) and IgM RF was quantified using a Modular P analyser (Hitachi, Maidenhead, UK) with cut-off levels as per the manufacturer’s instructions. As per the 2010 American College of Rheumatology (ACR)/European League Against Rheumatism (EULAR) criteria for RA [7], a negative result was defined as within the normal range, a “weakly positive” result as greater than the upper range of normal but below the level of three times the upper range of normal, and a “strongly positive” result as greater than three-fold higher than the upper range of normal. All individuals underwent analysis for RF and anti-CCP. Individuals who developed RA according to the 2010 ACR/EULAR criteria over 12 months were noted [7].
In total 122 bronchiectasis patients, 87 asthma patients and 78 controls were studied. RF positivity was significantly more prevalent in bronchiectasis compared with controls (31 (25.4%) out of 122 versus eight (10.3%) out of 78, p=0.01) but not significantly different when compared with the asthma patients (14 (16.1%) out of 87, p=0.13). Of those 31 RF-positive bronchiectasis patients, four (13%) were strongly anti-CCP positive, versus none of the 91 RF-negative bronchiectasis patients (p=0.0036). A strongly positive anti-CCP occurred significantly more frequently in bronchiectasis patients (four (3.3%) out of 122 versus none out of 164 of the asthma and control cases combined, p=0.03 by Fisher’s exact probability test). Of these four bronchiectasis patients strongly positive for anti-CCP, two subsequently developed RA within 12 months. The demographic details of the bronchiectasis patients, asthma patients and controls are summarised in figure 1a.
Demographic and functional test parameters data and prevalence of rheumatoid factor (RF) and anti-cyclic citrullinated antibody (anti-CCP) antibodies in a non-cystic fibrosis population of bronchiectasis (BR) patients. a) In terms of RF and/or anti-CCP, there was no difference in age between the patients who were found to be RF and/or anti-CCP positive (median 62.72 years, interquartile range (IQR) 19.97 years) and those who were RF and/or anti-CCP negative (median 61.90 years, IQR 19.69 years). Therefore differences in RF/anti-CCP between the groups would not appear to be attributable to age. b) Presence of RF autoantibodies and c) a strongly positive anti-CCP occurred significantly more frequently in BR patients four (3.3%) out of 122 versus none out of 165 of the asthma and control cases combined (p=0.03 by Fisher’s exact probability test). A two-sided p-value of less than 5% was considered significant. FVC: forced vital capacity; ns: nonsignificant.
Undoubtedly, a positive RF and anti-CCP in non-RA individuals greatly increases the risk of RA development [3, 4]. Therefore, our findings of a significantly more prevalent positive RF and anti-CCP in the bronchiectasis patients may explain the reported relationship between bronchiectasis and RA development [2]. To date, smoking has been regarded as the strongest risk factor for the development of a positive RF test in the general population, with a Finnish study (n=7124) observing RF positivity to occur twice as often in smokers than nonsmokers (a positive RF was observed in only 2.8% of the nonsmokers) [8]. The majority of the bronchiectasis patients in our study had never smoked (61%) yet 18% of these patients were RF positive, suggesting that bronchiectasis is associated with RF independently of smoking. Furthermore, only 4.9% of Danish current smokers derived from the general population have a positive RF test [3]; our data therefore suggest that bronchiectasis has a closer association with RF than smoking in individuals without RA. Our data do not suggest that bronchiectasis is the strongest environmental association with RF positivity. One prior study demonstrated RF positivity in 42% of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients [9], suggesting an interaction between cigarette smoking, COPD and RF production; however, none of these individuals were anti-CCP positive, unlike the bronchiectasis patients reported here.
Hilton and Doyle [5] observed a positive RF test in 52% of their 52 bronchiectasis patients, and Horan et al. [6] in 29% of their 24 bronchiectasis patients. These prior studies, in contrast to ours, included patients with connective tissue diseases, which are associated with RF positivity [10]. Secondly, both prior studies included RA patients. Finally, the diagnostic threshold for bronchiectasis has changed dramatically with the advent of HRCT scanning, which unquestionably leads to an earlier diagnosis. The clinical characteristics of the cohorts of Hilton and Doyle [5] and Horan et al. [6] support the supposition of a more severe bronchiectasis disease burden with relatively severe airflow obstruction and very high rates of Gram-negative pathogens observed in 95% and 52% of cases, respectively.
Both the asthma and bronchiectasis patients had a RF positivity rate higher than the control population. This is not altogether surprising as the presence of lymphoid follicles is noted in both asthma and bronchiectasis patients [11, 12]. Lung lymphoid tissue has been observed to be associated with local RF production [13]. Our asthma patients were younger than the bronchiectasis patients: if the asthma and bronchiectasis groups were more closely age matched, we may have had greater confidence in concluding both these separate groups truly had similarly raised levels of RF (fig. 1b]). An alternative explanation for our findings of raised RF in asthma reflects a limitation of our study: we did not limit recruitment to those asthma patients with a normal HRCT. The rates of HRCT scanning in asthma were very low in general, and patients with evidence of bronchiectasis and a history of asthma were excluded. It is conceivable, however, that patients who had developed bronchiectasis as a complication of their asthma (but symptoms did not prompt a clinical need for computed tomography) were included in our study group as asthma alone. This may explain why we failed to demonstrate a significant difference between the bronchiectasis and asthma patients in terms of a weakly positive RF. A blood donor study investigating RA development studied 2138 controls; 12 (0.6%) were anti-CCP positive [14]. In contrast, in our study, a positive anti-CCP was almost six-fold more prevalent (3.3%) in our bronchiectasis patients and was exclusively associated with RF positivity. This is important as a combination of both RF and anti-CCP was associated with a 100% conversion rate to RA in the aforementioned blood donor study over 5 years, as compared with a conversion rate of 1.5% for blood donors with only a positive IgM RF over the same period [14]. The expected rate of RA development in a Dutch general population was one in 1000 over 5 years [15], whereas we observed RA development in bronchiectasis of two out of 122 over 1 year.
BRAC RA represents the largest study of RF and the only study of anti-CCP in a well-characterised cohort of bronchiectasis patients. The key findings from this study are: 1) RF positivity is significantly more prevalent in bronchiectasis patients compared with healthy controls; 2) there is a significant association between RF positivity and anti-CCP positivity in bronchiectasis patients; 3) strongly positive RF and anti-CCP antibodies that are known to confer a high risk of RA development were significantly more prevalent in bronchiectasis patients compared with the control cases as a whole; and 4) in those RF-positive and strongly anti-CCP-positive bronchiectasis patients, 50% developed RA over a 12-month period. We suggest that screening for RF in bronchiectasis patients and anti-CCP testing in those RF-positive patients will identify a very high risk cohort for subsequent RA development.
Acknowledgments
We thank Dr Anne Marie Quirke and Prof. Patrick Venables of the Kennedy Institute, Oxford, UK, for measurement of anti-CCP. We also thank Dr Gill Baker and colleagues of the NIHR Clinical Research Facility, Exeter University Medical School, Exeter, UK, for providing ethically approved healthy control serum samples.
Footnotes
Support statement: We acknowledge funding support from Arthritis Research UK to E. Perry (grant 19894) and a Higher Education Funding Council for England Senior Lectureship to A. De Soyza. We also acknowledge National Institute for Health Research CLRN support to the recruiting centres via the UK Comprehensive Research Network portfolio.
Conflict of interest: Disclosures can be found alongside the online version of this article at www.erj.ersjournals.com
- Received April 4, 2014.
- Accepted May 25, 2014.
- ©ERS 2014