Rheumatoid Factor
Inmunidad e inflamaciónÚltima revisión: 7 de abril de 2026. Enfoque de fuentes: contexto estándar de interpretación de laboratorio, material médico de referencia y orientación clínica o de salud pública cuando corresponde.
¿Qué es Rheumatoid Factor?
Rheumatoid factor (RF) is an autoantibody—most commonly of the IgM class—directed against the Fc (constant) region of IgG antibodies. When RF binds to IgG, it forms immune complexes that can deposit in joints, blood vessels, and other tissues, triggering complement activation and inflammation. RF was first described in 1940 and was one of the earliest serological markers used in rheumatology.
RF is primarily associated with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and is included in the 2010 ACR/EULAR classification criteria for RA. However, RF is not specific to RA—it can be found in many other autoimmune diseases, chronic infections, and even in healthy elderly individuals. Approximately 60–80% of RA patients are RF-positive (seropositive RA), and RF-positive RA is associated with more aggressive joint disease, extra-articular manifestations (rheumatoid nodules, vasculitis, pulmonary disease), and worse prognosis compared to seronegative RA. When combined with anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide (anti-CCP) antibodies, the specificity for RA significantly increases.
Por qué importa
Rheumatoid factor is one of the two key serological tests for rheumatoid arthritis, alongside anti-CCP antibodies. While RF alone has limited specificity (~85%) for RA, high titers (≥3x upper limit of normal) and dual positivity with anti-CCP are highly predictive of RA and confer the highest score in the 2010 classification criteria. RF-positive RA patients tend to have more erosive joint disease, more extra-articular manifestations, and poorer long-term outcomes. RF also has diagnostic utility in other conditions such as Sjögren syndrome, cryoglobulinemia, and endocarditis.
Rangos de referencia normales
| Grupo | Rango | Unidad |
|---|---|---|
| Adults | <14 | IU/mL |
| Elderly (>65 years) | May be mildly positive without disease (up to 5–10%) |
Los rangos de referencia pueden variar entre laboratorios. Compara siempre tus resultados con los rangos proporcionados por tu laboratorio.
Qué significan los niveles altos de RF
Causas comunes
- Rheumatoid arthritis (60–80% of patients)
- Sjögren syndrome (75–95% of patients)
- Mixed cryoglobulinemia (often hepatitis C-associated)
- Systemic lupus erythematosus (20–30%)
- Chronic hepatitis B or C infection
- Subacute bacterial endocarditis
- Tuberculosis and other chronic infections
- Sarcoidosis
- Healthy elderly individuals (5–10% prevalence over age 65)
Posibles síntomas
- Joint pain, stiffness, and swelling (especially small joints of hands and feet)
- Morning stiffness lasting >30 minutes
- Symmetric joint involvement
- Fatigue
- Rheumatoid nodules
- Dry eyes and dry mouth (if Sjögren syndrome)
Qué hacer: Elevated RF should be interpreted in clinical context. If RA is suspected, also test anti-CCP antibodies (more specific for RA), inflammatory markers (ESR, CRP), and obtain imaging of affected joints. High-titer RF with positive anti-CCP strongly supports RA diagnosis and may indicate need for early aggressive disease-modifying therapy (DMARDs). If RF is elevated without joint symptoms, consider other causes: Sjögren syndrome, hepatitis C, chronic infections, and cryoglobulinemia. In healthy elderly with mildly positive RF and no symptoms, clinical monitoring alone may suffice.
Qué significan los niveles bajos de RF
Causas comunes
- Normal result—no autoantibodies detected
- Seronegative rheumatoid arthritis (20–40% of RA patients)
- Early RA (RF may seroconvert later in disease course)
Posibles síntomas
- No symptoms associated with negative RF
Qué hacer: Negative RF does not exclude rheumatoid arthritis—20–40% of RA patients are seronegative throughout their disease course. If RA is clinically suspected, anti-CCP antibodies should be tested as they may be positive in some RF-negative RA patients. Seronegative RA can still cause significant joint damage and requires the same vigilance in diagnosis and treatment.
¿Cuándo se recomienda la prueba de RF?
- Suspected rheumatoid arthritis (symmetric inflammatory polyarthritis)
- Evaluation of unexplained inflammatory joint disease
- Suspected Sjögren syndrome (dry eyes and mouth with arthritis)
- Evaluation of cryoglobulinemia, especially with hepatitis C
- Workup of unexplained vasculitis or rheumatoid nodules
Preguntas frecuentes
Biomarcadores relacionados
Referencias y enfoque de revisión
Las páginas del glosario de biomarcadores son explicaciones educativas y deben interpretarse junto con los rangos de referencia y comentarios proporcionados por tu laboratorio y tu profesional de salud. Para conocer nuestros estándares editoriales y proceso de revisión, consulta nuestra Política editorial y nuestro Proceso de revisión de contenido.
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Subir resultados de laboratorio →Aviso médico: Esta información es solo educativa y no sustituye el consejo, diagnóstico ni tratamiento médico profesional. Los rangos de referencia pueden variar entre laboratorios. Consulta siempre a tu profesional sanitario para interpretar tus resultados concretos.