Spondyloarthropathies (Seronegative RA)



Ovid: 5-Minute Sports Medicine Consult, The


Spondyloarthropathies (Seronegative RA)
Brent H. Messick
Kevin E. Burroughs
Basics
Description
  • Spondyloarthropathy (SpA) is a term applied to the clinical, radiologic, and immunogenetic features shared by a group of diseases that include:
    • Ankylosing spondylitis (AS)
    • Reactive arthritis (ReA)
    • Psoriatic arthritis (PsA)
    • Arthritis associated with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD)
    • Juvenile onset spondyloarthritis
    • Undifferentiated spondyloarthropathy (USpA):
      • These conditions are variably associated with the HLA B27 antigen. Individuals with these conditions frequently exhibit overlapping clinical and radiologic features.
  • Synonym(s): Seronegative spondyloarthropathies; HLA B27-related spondyloarthropathy
Epidemiology
  • AS and USpA are the most common types of SpA.
  • AS and ReA are more common in males.
  • SpA is seen in all age groups, but most cases present at 20–50 yrs of age.
Incidence
ReA incidence: 0.6–3.1/100,0007 (Level of Evidence 1c)
Prevalence
  • SpA: 0.5–2% of the Caucasian population
  • AS: 1–2/1,000
  • ReA: 1/1,000
  • PsA develops in 5% of patients with psoriasis.
Risk Factors
  • Male
  • Caucasian
  • Unprotected sex
  • Positive family history
  • ReA is significantly increased in persons with HIV.
Genetics
  • HLA B27 positivity:
    • AS 90–95%
    • ReA 80%
    • USpA: 70%, PsA 40%
    • IBD-associated 30%
  • 8% of Caucasians and 4% of African Americans are HLA B27-positive.
  • <20% of HLA B27-positive individuals will develop SpA.
Etiology
  • Most cases of SpA are associated with HLA B27.
  • ReA is triggered by an infectious agent (Chlamydia, Ureaplasma, Shigella, Salmonella, Campylobacter, and others).
Diagnosis
There are 2 criteria for research purposes: European Spondyloarthropathy Study Group (ESSG) and Amor. However, diagnosis of SpA remains clinical.
History
  • Inflammatory back pain:
    • Insidious onset of low back pain before the age of 40
    • Morning stiffness (>30 min)
    • Often associated with night pain
    • Persists for more than 3 mos
    • Improved with exercise and NSAIDs (inflammatory vs mechanical back pain)
  • Other joint or enthesis involvement, eye, bowel, skin, mucous membrane, gut, genitourinary symptoms
Physical Exam
  • Low back pain at night with prominent early morning stiffness (sacroiliitis, spondylitis)
  • Peripheral joint pain and swelling (often lower limb and asymmetric)
  • Pain and inflammation at the insertion of tendons or ligaments (enthesitis), sausage digits (dactylitis)
  • Ocular: Conjunctivitis, iritis
  • GI: Oral ulcerations, gut inflammation
  • Skin and nails: Psoriasis, keratoderma blennorrhagica, psoriatic nail dystrophy
  • Genitourinary: Urethritis, cervicitis, circinate balanitis
  • Constitutional: Fever and weight loss (ReA)
  • Lumbar spine: Restricted range of motion:
    • Schober's test: Mark the spinous process of L5 and make a mark 10 cm above that point. Ask the patient to bend forward. The distance between the 2 points should increase by more than 5 cm in a normal subject.
  • Peripheral joints: Tender and/or warm
  • Enthesitis: Tenderness around the heel (Achilles or plantar fascia)
  • Skin and nails: Psoriatic nail changes and plaques (scalp, extensor surface of knees)
Diagnostic Tests & Interpretation
Lab
  • Elevated ESR or C-reactive protein
  • Elevated WBCs in peripheral and synovial fluid:
    • Note: These studies have poor sensitivity and specificity.
Imaging
  • Joint space narrowing, signs of inflammation, multiple joint involvement, and distal involvement in the hands and feet with added features of bone proliferation suggest seronegative spondyloarthropathy:
    • Differentiation of these relies on the distribution of radiographic abnormalities and clinical information.
  • Peripheral arthritis with soft tissue swelling, juxta-articular osteopenia, joint space narrowing, and erosions
  • Areas of periostitis or osteitis are not uncommon (PsA, ReA).
  • Psoriatic arthritis:
    • Typically involves the hands, wrists, and feet. Bilateral or unilateral, symmetric or asymmetric.
    • Involvement of several joints in a single digit produces the classic “sausage digit.”
    • Irregular and indistinct appearance of marginal bone about the joint, characterized as “fuzzy” or “whiskering.” May also see one side of joint thinned, the other broad (“pencil-and-cup”).
    • In foot sclerosis, enthesitis, periostitis, and soft tissue swelling can give an “ivory phalanx” appearance.
    • At the sacroiliac (SI) joint, advanced changes are usually bilateral and show bone erosions and narrowing to the point of fusion.
  • Reactive arthritis:
    • Similar features to psoriatic arthritis
    • Lower extremity involvement more common than upper. Sausage digit and pencil-and-cup deformities can also occur.
    • In the spine, large, comma-shaped, paravertebral ossification may also be seen.
  • P.549


  • Ankylosing spondylitis:
    • More commonly involves the axial skeleton, although peripheral joints can be affected.
    • The spine findings are characterized by osteitis, syndesmophyte formation, facet inflammation, and eventual facet joint and vertebral body fusion (bamboo spine of AS).
    • SI joint disease is bilateral and symmetric, and typically precedes spine involvement.
    • MRI may detect up to 75% of early sacroiliitis not seen on plain radiography.6 (Level of Evidence 1b)
    • Spine involvement is centered at the thoracolumbar or lumbosacral junction. Focal areas of osteitis become sclerotic and are termed “the shiny corner sign.”
    • US may show areas of abnormal vascularization of the entheses.
Differential Diagnosis
  • Rheumatoid arthritis
  • Osteoarthritis
  • Psoriatic arthritis
  • Seronegative arthritis
  • Gout
  • Septic (gonococcal) arthritis
  • Sarcoidosis
Codes
ICD9
  • 696.0 Psoriatic arthropathy
  • 720.0 Ankylosing spondylitis
  • 721.90 Spondylosis of unspecified site without mention of myelopathy


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