SLE / Lupus Classification Criteria

2019 EULAR/ACR
SLE Classification Criteria

The current standard for classifying systemic lupus erythematosus. Requires a positive ANA as an entry criterion, then scores clinical and immunological features across seven domains. A total score of 10 or more classifies as SLE. Validated in over 13,000 patients.

Original Criteria
Aringer M, Costenbader K, et al.
Arthritis Rheum / Ann Rheum Dis, 2019
Entry Criterion (Required)
At any point in time. A patient who has never had a positive ANA does not meet the entry criterion and cannot be classified as SLE regardless of the domain score. If the ANA was positive previously but not currently, it still counts.
1
Constitutional
ConstitutionalCount highest applicable item only
Only the highest-scoring item checked in this domain counts toward the total.
2
Hematologic
HematologicCount highest applicable item only
Only the highest-scoring item checked in this domain counts toward the total.
3
Neuropsychiatric
NeuropsychiatricCount highest applicable item only
Only the highest-scoring item checked in this domain counts toward the total.
4
Mucocutaneous
MucocutaneousCount highest applicable item only
Only the highest-scoring item checked in this domain counts toward the total.
5
Serosal
SerosalCount highest applicable item only
Only the highest-scoring item checked in this domain counts toward the total.
6
Musculoskeletal
MusculoskeletalCount highest applicable item only
Only the highest-scoring item checked in this domain counts toward the total.
7
Renal
RenalCount highest applicable item only
Only the highest-scoring item checked in this domain counts toward the total.
8
Immunological
Immunological (Antibodies)Count highest in each sub-group separately
The immunological domain has three sub-groups. The highest item within each sub-group contributes separately. Maximum from this domain is 12 points (Anti-dsDNA or anti-Sm = 6, complement = 4, antiphospholipid = 2).
Anti-dsDNA or Anti-Sm
Complement Proteins
Antiphospholipid Antibodies
📋 What This Calculator Does

The 2019 EULAR/ACR SLE criteria use a two-step approach. First, the patient must have a positive ANA at titer 1:80 or higher at any point in time. Without this, SLE cannot be classified regardless of other findings. Second, clinical and immunological features across seven domains are scored, with each domain counting only its highest applicable item. A total score of 10 or more classifies as SLE.

These criteria were developed to replace the 1997 ACR and 2012 SLICC criteria. They have higher sensitivity and comparable specificity to the 1997 criteria, and were validated in a dataset of over 13,000 patients. A key design principle is that each domain's maximum contribution is capped by only counting the highest item, which prevents a single organ system from dominating the score.

💡 Pearls and Pitfalls
ANA is a mandatory gate, not a scoring item. ANA does not add points to the score. It is a binary gate. A patient with 15 points across other domains but a negative ANA does not meet the classification criteria. This reflects the high sensitivity of ANA for SLE (greater than 95%) and its role as a biological prerequisite for classification.
Historical findings count. Clinical criteria that occurred at any time in the past, not just currently active findings, are counted. A patient with a prior history of lupus nephritis documented years ago who is now in clinical remission still accumulates those points. Document all historical features carefully.
Classification is not diagnosis. A patient can score 10 or more and still not have a clinical diagnosis of SLE if the features are explained by another condition. These criteria were developed for research classification. Clinical diagnosis requires the judgment of an experienced rheumatologist with full evaluation of the differential diagnosis.
Fever must be attributed to SLE. Constitutional fever (2 points) must not be explained by infection, medications, or other inflammatory conditions. Attribution is often the most clinically difficult judgment in applying these criteria, particularly in patients with known infectious comorbidities.
🔬 Evidence

The 2019 criteria were developed by Aringer, Costenbader, Daikh, and colleagues through an ACR/EULAR collaboration, published simultaneously in Arthritis and Rheumatism and Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases in 2019. Item weights were derived from logistic regression on a multi-center dataset of SLE patients and disease controls. The final criteria were validated against an independent cohort and demonstrated a sensitivity of 96.1% and specificity of 93.4% for SLE classification.

View References
1
Aringer M, Costenbader K, Daikh D, et al. 2019 European League Against Rheumatism/American College of Rheumatology classification criteria for systemic lupus erythematosus. Arthritis Rheum. 2019;71(9):1400-1412. Original criteria development and validation paper.
2
Johnson SR, Khanna D, Daikh D, et al. Use of Consensus Methodology to Determine Candidate Items for Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Classification Criteria. J Rheumatol. 2019;46(7):721-726. Derivation methodology for item selection and weighting.
For classification purposes only. A score of 10 or more with a positive ANA entry criterion classifies as SLE for research and documentation. This is not a diagnostic tool. Alternative diagnoses must be excluded by clinical evaluation. The 2019 criteria have a sensitivity of 96.1% and specificity of 93.4%; approximately 4% of true SLE patients and 7% of disease controls may be misclassified.
2019 EULAR/ACR SLE Score
0
/ 48+
05101520+
Threshold for SLE: 10 points + positive ANA
ANA entry criterion not met
ANA entry criterion
Not met
1. Constitutional
0
2. Hematologic
0
3. Neuropsychiatric
0
4. Mucocutaneous
0
5. Serosal
0
6. Musculoskeletal
0
7. Renal
0
8. Immunological
0
Interpretation
Check the ANA entry criterion first, then select applicable clinical and immunological features.
Reviewed by Mahiar Rabie, MS, MD · AutoimmuneCalc