Granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA) and microscopic polyangiitis (MPA) are both autoimmune vasculitides associated with antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA), but they differ in clinical features, pathology, and organ involvement. Below is a concise comparison:

1. Definition

  • GPA: A necrotizing granulomatous vasculitis affecting small- and medium-sized vessels, often involving the respiratory tract and kidneys.
  • MPA: A necrotizing vasculitis primarily affecting small vessels (capillaries, venules, arterioles), without granulomas, commonly targeting kidneys and lungs.

2. ANCA Association

  • GPA: Typically associated with c-ANCA (PR3-ANCA) (anti-proteinase 3).
  • MPA: Typically associated with p-ANCA (MPO-ANCA) (anti-myeloperoxidase).
  • Note: ANCA patterns may overlap, and some cases are ANCA-negative.

3. Clinical Features

  • GPA:
    • Upper respiratory tract: Sinusitis, nasal crusting, epistaxis, saddle-nose deformity.
    • Lower respiratory tract: Pulmonary nodules, cavities, or infiltrates; hemoptysis.
    • Kidneys: Rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis (RPGN) with crescentic glomeruli.
    • Other: Skin (purpura), joints, eyes (scleritis), nervous system.
    • Classic triad: Upper airway, lower airway, and renal involvement.
  • MPA:
    • Kidneys: RPGN, hematuria, proteinuria (most common feature).
    • Lungs: Pulmonary hemorrhage, interstitial lung disease.
    • Other: Skin (purpura), peripheral neuropathy, gastrointestinal involvement.
    • No upper respiratory tract involvement (key differentiator from GPA).

4. Pathology

  • GPA: Necrotizing vasculitis with granulomatous inflammation in affected tissues (e.g., lungs, sinuses).
  • MPA: Necrotizing vasculitis without granulomas; pauci-immune glomerulonephritis on kidney biopsy.

5. Epidemiology

  • GPA: More common in older adults (40–60 years), slight male predominance, higher prevalence in Caucasian populations.
  • MPA: Similar age group, no strong gender or ethnic predilection.

6. Diagnosis

  • GPA:
    • Clinical features (respiratory + renal involvement).
    • Positive c-ANCA/PR3-ANCA (high specificity).
    • Biopsy showing granulomatous vasculitis.
    • Imaging: CT chest for nodules/cavities.
  • MPA:
    • Clinical features (renal + pulmonary hemorrhage).
    • Positive p-ANCA/MPO-ANCA.
    • Biopsy showing pauci-immune vasculitis without granulomas.
    • Rule out other causes of RPGN or pulmonary-renal syndrome.

7. Treatment

  • Both are treated similarly:
    • Induction: Glucocorticoids (e.g., prednisone) + cyclophosphamide or rituximab for severe disease; methotrexate for milder GPA.
    • Maintenance: Azathioprine, rituximab, or methotrexate to prevent relapse.
    • Supportive care: Dialysis for severe renal failure, plasma exchange for pulmonary hemorrhage or severe RPGN.
  • GPA may require longer maintenance due to higher relapse risk.

8. Prognosis

  • GPA: Relapses are more common; untreated, high mortality due to renal or respiratory failure.
  • MPA: High risk of renal failure; pulmonary hemorrhage carries poor prognosis if untreated.
  • Both have improved outcomes with early diagnosis and aggressive treatment.

Key Differentiators

  • Granulomas: Present in GPA, absent in MPA.
  • Upper airway involvement: Common in GPA, rare/absent in MPA.
  • ANCA type: c-ANCA/PR3 (GPA) vs. p-ANCA/MPO (MPA).
  • Pulmonary findings: Nodules/cavities in GPA vs. hemorrhage/fibrosis in MPA.

Summary Table

FeatureGPAMPA
ANCA Typec-ANCA (PR3)p-ANCA (MPO)
GranulomasYesNo
Upper AirwayCommon (sinusitis, epistaxis)Rare/absent
Lung InvolvementNodules, cavitiesHemorrhage, fibrosis
Kidney InvolvementRPGNRPGN
BiopsyGranulomatous vasculitisPauci-immune vasculitis
TreatmentSteroids + rituximab/cyclophosphamideSimilar
Relapse RiskHigherLower

Disclaimer: owerl is not a doctor; please consult one.

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