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    Update of the simplified criteria for autoimmune hepatitis: Evaluation of the methodology for immunoserological testing

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    Background & aims: The simplified criteria for the diagnosis of autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) include immunofluorescence testing (IFT) of antinuclear and smooth muscle autoantibodies (ANA and SMA) on rodent tissue sections. We aimed to establish scoring criteria for the implementation of ANA IFT on human epithelioma-2 (HEp-2) cells and ELISA-based testing. Methods: ANA and SMA reactivity of 61 AIH sera and 72 non-alcoholic fatty liver disease controls were separately assessed on tissue sections and HEp-2 cells to compare the diagnostic value at increasing titers. A total of 113 patients with AIH at diagnosis and 202 controls from 3 European centers were assessed by IFT as well as 3 different commercially available ANA ELISA and 1 anti-F-actin ELISA. Results: ANA assessment by IFT on liver sections had 83.6% sensitivity and 69.4% specificity for AIH at a titer of 1:40. On HEp-2 cells, sensitivity and specificity were 75.4% and 73.6%, respectively, at an adjusted titer of 1:160. Area under the curve (AUC) values of ANA ELISA ranged from 0.70-0.87, with ELISA coated with HEp-2 extracts in addition to selected antigens performing significantly better. SMA assessment by IFT had the highest specificity for the SMA-VG/T pattern and anti-microfilament reactivity on HEp-2 cells. ELISA-based anti-F-actin evaluation was a strong predictor of AIH (AUC 0.88) and performed better than SMA assessment by IFT (AUC 0.77-0.87). Conclusion: At adjusted cut-offs, both ANA IFT using HEp-2 cells and ELISA-based autoantibody evaluation for ANA and SMA are potential alternatives to tissue-based IFT for the diagnosis of AIH
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