Background: Endothelial cell damage occurs during vasculitic processes in vivo. With the alteration of the endothelium, exposure to basement membrane components may occur with induction of humoral immunity.
Methods: In the present study, we evaluated the prevalence of antibodies against the basement membrane antigen laminin (LMN) in patients with ANCA-associated systemic vasculitis (AASV), pathologic controls (systemic lupus erythematosus, mixed cryoglobulinaemia, Henoch-Schönlein purpura, primary glomerulonephritis) and normal individuals.
Results: By ELISA, 21.6% of AASV (16/74) and 10% of pathologic controls (3/30), but only one of the normal controls (2. 8%) had these antibodies (P=0.02). When AASV patients were divided into two groups according to diagnosis and ANCA antigen specificity, antibodies to LMN were found in 27.5% of MPO-ANCA positive microscopic polyangiitis patients (11/40) vs. only 14.7% of PR3-ANCA positive Wegener granulomatosis patients (5/34). There was no correlation between the presence or titre of anti-LMN antibodies and the main clinical and laboratory parameters.
Conclusion: These results indicate that basement membrane antigens may become immunogenic in patients with AASV, especially in those with MPO-ANCA positivity. These antibodies are most likely the result of endothelial damage secondary to the initial inflammatory process but may well perpetuate further vascular damage in some patients.