2023 ACR/EULAR antiphospholipid syndrome classification criteria
Barbhaiya, Medha; Zuily, Stephane; Naden, Ray; Hendry, Alison; Manneville, Florian; Amigo, Mary Carmen; Amoura, Zahir; Andrade, Danieli; Andreoli, Laura; Artim-Esen, Bahar; Atsumi, Tatsuya; Avcin, Tadej; Belmont, Michael H.; Bertolaccini, Maria Laura; Branch, D. Ware; Carvalheiras, Graziela; Casini, Alessandro; Cervera, Ricard; Cohen, Hannah; Costedoat-Chalumeau, Nathalie; Crowther, Mark; De Jesús, Guilherme; Delluc, Aurelien; Desai, Sheetal; Sancho, Maria De; Devreese, Katrien M.; Diz-Kucukkaya, Reyhan; Duarte-García, Ali; Frances, Camille; Garcia, David; Gris, Jean Christophe; Jordan, Natasha; Leaf, Rebecca K.; Kello, Nina; Knight, Jason S.; Laskin, Carl; Lee, Alfred I.; Legault, Kimberly; Levine, Steve R.; Levy, Roger A.; Limper, Maarten; Lockshin, Michael D.; Mayer-Pickel, Karoline; Musial, Jack; Meroni, Pier Luigi; Orsolini, Giovanni; Ortel, Thomas L.; Pengo, Vittorio; Petri, Michelle; Pons-Estel, Guillermo; Gomez-Puerta, Jose A.; Raimboug, Quentin; Roubey, Robert; Sanna, Giovanni; Seshan, Surya V.; Sciascia, Savino; Tektonidou, Maria G.; Tincani, Angela; Wahl, Denis; Willis, Rohan; Yelnik, Cécile; Zuily, Catherine; Guillemin, Francis; Costenbader, Karen; Erkan, Doruk
(2023) Annals of the rheumatic diseases, volume 82, issue 10, pp. 1258 - 1270
(Article)
Abstract
Objective To develop new antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) classification criteria with high specificity for use in observational studies and trials, jointly supported by the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) and EULAR. Methods This international multidisciplinary initiative included four phases: (1) Phase I, criteria generation by surveys and literature review; (2) Phase
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II, criteria reduction by modified Delphi and nominal group technique exercises; (3) Phase III, criteria definition, further reduction with the guidance of real-world patient scenarios, and weighting via consensus-based multicriteria decision analysis, and threshold identification; and (4) Phase IV, validation using independent adjudicators' consensus as the gold standard. Results The 2023 ACR/EULAR APS classification criteria include an entry criterion of at least one positive antiphospholipid antibody (aPL) test within 3 years of identification of an aPL-associated clinical criterion, followed by additive weighted criteria (score range 1-7 points each) clustered into six clinical domains (macrovascular venous thromboembolism, macrovascular arterial thrombosis, microvascular, obstetric, cardiac valve, and hematologic) and two laboratory domains (lupus anticoagulant functional coagulation assays, and solid-phase enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays for IgG/IgM anticardiolipin and/or IgG/IgM anti-β 2 -glycoprotein I antibodies). Patients accumulating at least three points each from the clinical and laboratory domains are classified as having APS. In the validation cohort, the new APS criteria vs the 2006 revised Sapporo classification criteria had a specificity of 99% vs 86%, and a sensitivity of 84% vs 99%. Conclusion These new ACR/EULAR APS classification criteria were developed using rigorous methodology with multidisciplinary international input. Hierarchically clustered, weighted, and risk-stratified criteria reflect the current thinking about APS, providing high specificity and a strong foundation for future APS research.
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Keywords: antibodies, antiphospholipid syndrome, thrombosis, antiphospholipid, Rheumatology, Immunology and Allergy, Immunology, General Biochemistry,Genetics and Molecular Biology
ISSN: 0003-4967
Publisher: Elsevier
Note: Publisher Copyright: © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.
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