CCP Negative: What a Negative Anti-CCP Test Result Means

A negative anti-CCP test does not rule out RA. Learn what seronegative RA is, how to interpret a negative result, and what the next steps are.

April 23, 2026

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before making changes to your health routine or interpreting laboratory results.

Author
Superpower Science Team
Reviewed by
Julija Rabcuka
PhD Candidate at Oxford University
Creative
Jarvis Wang

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before making changes to your health routine or interpreting laboratory results.


A negative anti-CCP result can feel reassuring, but it does not close the question of rheumatoid arthritis. Approximately one-third of people who have RA will test negative for anti-CCP antibodies. Understanding what a negative result does and does not exclude — and what to do when clinical suspicion remains — is the clinical context that lab reports rarely provide.

Key Takeaways

  • What a negative result means: Anti-CCP below the laboratory's negative threshold (typically below 20 U/mL); reduces but does not exclude the likelihood of RA.
  • Sensitivity limitation: Approximately 67% sensitivity means roughly one in three RA patients tests negative for anti-CCP.
  • Seronegative RA: Rheumatoid arthritis in anti-CCP-negative, RF-negative patients is a recognized clinical entity with a distinct but still progressive disease course.
  • Next tests if negative: Rheumatoid factor, CRP, ESR, joint imaging, and ANA if broader autoimmune differential is relevant.
  • Classification still possible: RA can be classified under 2010 ACR/EULAR criteria even when anti-CCP is negative, based on joint involvement, duration, and inflammatory markers.
  • Future seroconversion: A single negative result does not predict future anti-CCP status; some patients who develop RA later become CCP-positive over time.
  • Treatment not affected: Treatment guidelines apply equally to seronegative and seropositive RA; antibody status does not determine first-line management.

What a Negative Anti-CCP Test Result Means

A negative anti-CCP test result — typically defined as a result below 20 U/mL on second-generation (CCP2) commercial assays — means the assay did not detect IgG antibodies against cyclic citrullinated peptides at a level above the laboratory's established negative threshold. This reduces the probability of seropositive rheumatoid arthritis, but it does not exclude rheumatoid arthritis. The distinction is critical: the anti-CCP test's approximately 67% sensitivity means that for every three people with RA, roughly one will return a negative anti-CCP result. A systematic review by Whiting and colleagues, published in Annals of Internal Medicine in 2010 and covering 151 primary diagnostic studies, pooled sensitivity of approximately 67% and specificity of approximately 95% for anti-CCP in RA. Nishimura and colleagues, in a 2007 meta-analysis in the same journal, confirmed this sensitivity range across multiple studies, establishing that the test's clinical utility is primarily in confirming suspected RA when positive rather than in ruling it out when negative. Avouac and colleagues, in a systematic review published in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases in 2006, calculated a negative likelihood ratio of approximately 0.37 for anti-CCP in RA — meaning a negative test reduces post-test probability meaningfully but does not bring it to zero, even in populations with moderate pre-test probability.

Anti-CCP Reference Ranges

Understanding where "negative" falls on the quantitative scale is important for interpreting results near the threshold. Most second-generation (CCP2) commercial assays use the following tiers.

  • Negative: Below 20 U/mL
  • Weakly positive: 20–39 U/mL
  • Moderately positive: 40–59 U/mL
  • Strongly positive: 60 U/mL or above

Reference ranges vary by laboratory and individual. A result within the negative range does not confirm the absence of RA; it reduces the probability of seropositive RA while leaving seronegative RA and early seroconversion as clinical possibilities. Your provider will interpret your specific result alongside symptoms, medical history, and other test findings.

What Seronegative RA Is and How It Differs from Seropositive RA

Seronegative RA as a recognized clinical entity

Seronegative rheumatoid arthritis refers to RA diagnosed in patients who test negative for both anti-CCP and rheumatoid factor — the two primary serological markers for RA. It is not a diagnosis of exclusion; it is a clinically defined subset with characteristic features and documented disease progression. McInnes and Schett, in their landmark 2011 review of RA pathogenesis in the New England Journal of Medicine, characterized seropositive and seronegative RA as distinct clinical and genetic subtypes, noting that the two groups differ in genetic associations, synovial histology, and disease course. Smolen and colleagues, in a 2016 Lancet seminar on RA, summarized the evidence that seronegative RA follows a generally milder but still progressive course — a distinction that is probabilistic, not definitive. Seronegative patients can and do develop erosive joint damage, and clinical management is required regardless of antibody status.

How seronegative RA is diagnosed

The 2010 ACR/EULAR classification criteria do not require a positive anti-CCP or RF for RA classification. In the criteria framework reviewed by Radner and colleagues in a systematic review in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases in 2014, a patient can reach the 6-point classification threshold for RA through joint involvement, symptom duration, and inflammatory markers alone — without any serological contribution. For example, a patient with 10 or more small-joint involvement scores 5 classification points on that domain alone; adding a symptom duration of 6 weeks or more (1 point) achieves the classification threshold independently of serology. This means that a negative anti-CCP, while it removes a potential 2 to 3 points from the serological domain of the score, does not preclude RA classification in a patient with sufficient joint and clinical findings.

Disease course in seronegative RA

Seronegative RA tends, on average, toward less radiographic progression than seropositive RA — but "on average" is not synonymous with "benign." Kroot and colleagues, in a 2000 prospective study in Arthritis and Rheumatism, showed that anti-CCP-negative RA patients experienced less radiographic joint damage over 6 years than CCP-positive patients, while still demonstrating measurable disease progression. Forslind and colleagues, in a 2004 study in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, confirmed that seronegative early RA patients had less joint damage at follow-up compared to seropositive patients, while documenting that the seronegative group still experienced progressive joint erosion requiring treatment. Berglin and colleagues, in a 2006 study in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, noted that seronegative RA patients with RF positivity still exhibited radiological progression, emphasizing that seronegative for anti-CCP does not equate to disease-free. Kastbom and colleagues, in the Swedish TIRA cohort, documented that seronegative patients follow a distinct 3-year disease trajectory from seropositive patients but can still require DMARD therapy based on disease activity.

Technical Reasons a Negative Anti-CCP May Not Reflect the Full Picture

Narrow ACPA reactivity

Some patients with RA generate autoantibodies against citrullinated proteins, but against a narrow range of antigens not captured by the commercial anti-CCP panel. Willemze and colleagues, in a 2012 study in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, showed that the breadth of the ACPA recognition profile varies among RA patients, with some generating a broadly reactive anti-citrullinated response that the CCP assay captures readily, and others generating a narrow response that may not reach the assay's detection threshold. Brink and colleagues, in a 2013 study in Arthritis and Rheumatism, demonstrated using multiplex analysis that some individuals later diagnosed with RA had pre-diagnostic positivity for specific ACPAs not included in the standard CCP panel — a negative CCP IgG did not exclude anti-citrullinated protein autoimmunity in these cases. Liang and colleagues, in a 2019 study in Rheumatology, identified autoantibodies to cyclic citrullinated collagen type II peptides in RA patients who did not test positive on standard CCP2 assays, supporting the existence of anti-citrullinated reactivity beyond what the commercial panel detects.

Early disease and future seroconversion

Anti-CCP sensitivity is not uniform across the entire course of RA. In very early disease, the autoantibody response may not have reached the level detectable by the commercial assay — a false negative in the truest sense. Rantapää-Dahlqvist and colleagues documented cases where anti-CCP became detectable over time as the immune response matured, consistent with a gradual accumulation of anti-citrullinated reactivity. Meyer and colleagues, in their serial-measurement study, noted that some initially seronegative patients seroconverted over follow-up. This means a single negative anti-CCP in a patient early in the clinical course should not be interpreted as a permanent negative finding. Retesting after 6 to 12 months if clinical suspicion remains high is a reasonable clinical strategy.

What to Do After a Negative Anti-CCP Result

What other tests to order

A negative anti-CCP in the context of inflammatory joint symptoms should be followed by rheumatoid factor testing, as the two markers capture partially overlapping but distinct populations of RA patients. Vallbracht and colleagues, in a 2004 study in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, demonstrated that approximately 20–30% of RA patients are negative for both anti-CCP and RF, while others are positive for one but not the other. Bas and colleagues, in a 2003 study in Rheumatology, showed that CCP-negative patients can still be positive for IgM-RF or IgA-RF, and that the combined use of these markers improves detection relative to either alone. CRP and ESR provide corroborating evidence of systemic inflammation and contribute to ACR/EULAR classification scoring. Anti-MCV (antibody against mutated citrullinated vimentin) is a supplemental ACPA marker available in some clinical settings: a 2025 study in Clinical and Experimental Medicine compared anti-MCV and anti-CCP diagnostic utility in RA and found anti-MCV can be positive in some patients who test negative on the standard CCP assay.

When imaging adds information that serology cannot provide

In a patient with inflammatory joint symptoms but negative anti-CCP, imaging can detect synovitis and early erosions independent of the serological result. Musculoskeletal ultrasound is sensitive for synovitis that may not be clinically apparent on examination. X-rays of the hands and feet detect erosive changes that establish structural joint damage. MRI is the most sensitive modality for early bone marrow edema, which can precede visible erosion by months to years. Van Gaalen and colleagues, in a 2004 prospective study in Arthritis and Rheumatism, showed that even in CCP-negative patients with undifferentiated arthritis, a proportion still progressed to RA over follow-up, underscoring that clinical and imaging evaluation remains essential regardless of serological result. Nam and colleagues, in a 2016 study in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, demonstrated that even anti-CCP-negative individuals with non-specific musculoskeletal symptoms can develop clinical arthritis over follow-up, supporting active monitoring when clinical suspicion is present.

The role of monitoring in CCP-negative patients with persistent symptoms

A negative anti-CCP does not end the clinical question for a patient with inflammatory joint symptoms. Nell and colleagues, in a 2005 study in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, showed that combining autoantibody profiling with clinical assessment provides superior early diagnostic information compared to any single marker. Mankia and Emery, in a 2016 review in Current Opinion in Rheumatology, proposed that their window-of-opportunity framework includes CCP-negative patients with clinically suspect arthralgia — recognizing that seronegative presentations still benefit from early specialist assessment. If symptoms persist or progress, repeat serological testing, imaging, and rheumatological consultation provide the most complete evaluation framework.

Factors That Affect Anti-CCP Negativity Interpretation

Several factors influence how a negative anti-CCP result should be weighted clinically.

  • Pre-test probability — Central to interpretation: A negative anti-CCP in a patient with low pre-test probability (non-inflammatory joint pattern, no family history, normal CRP and ESR) carries high reassurance value. The same negative result in a patient with symmetric small-joint swelling, morning stiffness, and elevated CRP reduces probability meaningfully but leaves substantial residual clinical concern.
  • Disease duration — Early disease may produce false negatives: In the first weeks of symptoms, anti-CCP may not yet have risen to detectable levels; a negative early in the disease course should be interpreted with caution and may benefit from repeat testing.
  • Assay generation — CCP3 improves sensitivity modestly: CCP3-generation assays detect some patients missed by CCP2; a CCP2-negative result that is retested on CCP3 may change interpretation in borderline cases.
  • Immunosuppressive therapy — May suppress seroconversion: Patients already on corticosteroids or immunosuppressants at the time of testing may have artificially suppressed antibody levels; testing in this context should be interpreted with awareness of concurrent medication effects.
  • Other ACPA targets — May be missed by standard assay: Narrow ACPA reactivity to antigens outside the CCP panel is a recognized biological reason for CCP-negativity in some RA patients; anti-MCV and other expanded ACPA panels may add information in this subset.

Companion Biomarkers Worth Testing Alongside Anti-CCP When Negative

When anti-CCP is negative, the clinical evaluation is not complete. Testing CRP and rheumatoid factor alongside anti-CCP provides the most complete serological picture for inflammatory arthritis evaluation.

  • C-reactive protein (CRP): Quantifies current inflammatory burden. Why test when anti-CCP is negative: Elevated CRP in a CCP-negative patient with joint symptoms is a signal to pursue further evaluation; seronegative RA can still drive systemic inflammation detectable by CRP.
  • Rheumatoid factor (RF): Detects a separate autoantibody class with partial RA overlap. Why test when anti-CCP is negative: Some RA patients are RF-positive but CCP-negative; combined testing improves overall serological detection.
  • Antinuclear antibody (ANA): Screens for other systemic autoimmune conditions. Why test when anti-CCP is negative: Some conditions with RA-like joint presentations — lupus, Sjögren syndrome — are ANA-positive but anti-CCP-negative; a negative CCP combined with a positive ANA shifts the differential toward these conditions.
  • Erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR): Non-specific inflammatory marker. Why test when anti-CCP is negative: Elevated ESR with a negative anti-CCP but active joint symptoms is a composite finding that supports continued evaluation rather than dismissal of the inflammatory joint diagnosis.

When to Take This Seriously

A negative anti-CCP result should not be used to dismiss inflammatory joint symptoms in a patient whose clinical presentation is otherwise consistent with RA or another inflammatory arthritis. The test's approximately 33% false-negative rate in confirmed RA is a material limitation that must be built into any clinical interpretation. When a patient has symmetric small-joint swelling, morning stiffness lasting more than 30 minutes, and elevated CRP or ESR, a negative anti-CCP reduces but does not eliminate clinical concern. In this scenario, rheumatoid factor testing, imaging, and specialist evaluation remain appropriate next steps. Conversely, a negative anti-CCP in a patient with osteoarthritis-pattern joint symptoms — asymmetric, predominantly large joint, no inflammatory features — is genuinely reassuring. Clinical context determines how much weight to place on a negative result. The principle articulated in the seronegative RA literature is that antibody status should inform but not dominate the clinical reasoning: the 2021 ACR treatment guidelines for RA by Fraenkel and colleagues apply the same DMARD framework to seronegative and seropositive RA alike, reflecting that treatment decisions ultimately rest on disease activity and joint damage, not antibody titer. Understanding your serological profile — including what a negative anti-CCP does and does not exclude — is most useful in the context of a full clinical evaluation. A comprehensive inflammatory markers assessment, including CRP, ESR, and RF alongside anti-CCP, provides the most complete baseline for that evaluation.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What does a negative anti-CCP test mean?

A negative anti-CCP test means the assay did not detect IgG antibodies against cyclic citrullinated peptides above the laboratory's negative threshold (typically below 20 U/mL on CCP2 assays). This reduces the probability of seropositive rheumatoid arthritis but does not exclude RA. A systematic review by Whiting and colleagues, published in Annals of Internal Medicine in 2010, reported approximately 67% sensitivity for anti-CCP in RA, meaning roughly one-third of people with RA test negative. A negative result in a patient with inflammatory joint symptoms warrants continued clinical evaluation rather than reassurance.

Can you have RA with a negative anti-CCP?

Yes. Seronegative RA — rheumatoid arthritis in patients who test negative for both anti-CCP and rheumatoid factor — is a recognized clinical entity. McInnes and Schett, in their 2011 review in the New England Journal of Medicine, characterized seropositive and seronegative RA as clinically and genetically distinct subtypes. Smolen and colleagues, in a 2016 Lancet seminar on RA, noted that seronegative RA follows a generally milder but still progressive course. A clinical diagnosis of RA can be made on joint findings, symptom duration, and inflammatory markers even when anti-CCP is negative.

What other tests should be ordered if anti-CCP is negative?

Rheumatoid factor (RF) should be ordered alongside anti-CCP: approximately 20–30% of RA patients are RF-positive but CCP-negative, as documented by Vallbracht and colleagues in a 2004 head-to-head study in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases. Bas and colleagues confirmed that CCP-negative patients can still be RF-positive. CRP and ESR provide corroborating evidence of systemic inflammation, and joint imaging (X-ray for erosions, ultrasound for synovitis, or MRI for early changes) can detect structural changes independent of serology. The ANA panel may also be relevant if other autoimmune conditions are on the differential.

What is seronegative RA?

Seronegative RA refers to rheumatoid arthritis in patients who test negative for both anti-CCP and rheumatoid factor. It is a recognized clinical and pathological subset. Kroot and colleagues demonstrated that seronegative RA patients tend to accumulate less radiographic joint damage over 6 years than seropositive patients, though joint damage does occur and disease management is still required. The 2010 ACR/EULAR classification criteria, reviewed by Radner and colleagues, allow RA classification based on joint involvement, duration, and inflammatory markers even when serology is negative. Management is guided by the same principles as seropositive RA.

Could my anti-CCP become positive later even if it's negative now?

Yes. A negative anti-CCP at one point in time does not predict future status. Rantapää-Dahlqvist and colleagues documented cases where anti-CCP later became positive in individuals who developed RA, reflecting a gradual accumulation of autoimmune reactivity. Meyer and colleagues noted that some initially CCP-negative patients seroconvert over time. In patients with persistent clinical suspicion for RA, repeat testing after 6 to 12 months is reasonable if symptoms continue or progress.

Does a negative anti-CCP mean my joint symptoms are not inflammatory?

No. A negative anti-CCP does not exclude inflammatory arthritis. Inflammatory joint disease can arise through mechanisms independent of the citrullinated protein autoimmunity pathway. Seronegative RA, psoriatic arthritis, reactive arthritis, and other inflammatory conditions can all produce joint findings consistent with inflammatory arthritis while testing negative for anti-CCP. Clinical evaluation of joint distribution, synovitis on examination, morning stiffness duration, and imaging remains essential regardless of anti-CCP result.

What other anti-citrullinated antibody tests exist if anti-CCP is negative?

The standard anti-CCP assay may miss some RA patients because their ACPA response targets a narrow range of citrullinated antigens not captured by the commercial CCP2 or CCP3 antigen panel. Willemze and colleagues, in a 2012 study in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, showed that some RA patients have narrow ACPA reactivity that the standard assay may not detect. Anti-MCV (antibodies against mutated citrullinated vimentin) is an alternative ACPA marker: a 2025 study in Clinical and Experimental Medicine compared diagnostic utility of anti-MCV and anti-CCP in RA, finding anti-MCV can be positive in some CCP-negative patients. Liang and colleagues, in a 2019 study in Rheumatology, identified autoantibody responses to cyclic citrullinated collagen peptides in RA patients not captured by standard CCP assays.

Does a negative anti-CCP mean RA treatment would be different?

Not substantially. The 2021 ACR treatment guidelines for RA by Fraenkel and colleagues, published in Arthritis Care and Research, apply DMARD-based treatment recommendations to both seropositive and seronegative RA. Seronegative RA is treated with the same DMARD framework as seropositive RA, with management intensity guided by disease activity, joint damage, and functional status rather than antibody status alone. Seronegative patients may have somewhat less aggressive disease on average, but the clinical management approach follows the same evidence-based framework.