RESUMO
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) has many pulmonary manifestations, including bronchial abnormalities that can develop into Mycobacterium avium-complex (MAC) pulmonary disease (PD). MAC-PD can be lethal in patients receiving tumor necrosis factor-alpha blockers despite administration of antibiotics. Diagnosis of MAC-PD is often difficult, because MAC is an environmental organism. In this study, we investigated the usefulness of serodiagnosis of MAC-PD in RA patients by using an enzyme immunoassay (EIA) kit that detects anti-glycopeptidolipid (GPL) core antigen IgA antibodies. Antibody levels were measured in 63 patients with RA: 14 with MAC-PD plus 3 cultured nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) other than MAC, 16 with pulmonary abnormalities characterizing NTM but undetected in sputum culture, and 30 control subjects. RA patients with MAC-PD showed significantly higher antibody levels than controls (p = 0.02). The cutoff point was set at 0.7 IU/l, making the sensitivity and specificity of the antibody in MAC-PD and control patients 43% and 100%, respectively. The EIA kit is useful for diagnosis of MAC-PD in RA patients because of its high specificity. This test is an easier and less invasive form of examination and could therefore replace bronchoscopy as the main diagnostic procedure for RA patients with MAC-PD.