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Diagnostic Accuracy of IgA Anti-Tissue Transglutaminase Antibody Assays in Celiac Disease Patients with Selective IgA Deficiency
- Source :
- Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 1109:212-220
- Publication Year :
- 2007
- Publisher :
- Wiley, 2007.
-
Abstract
- Clinical studies have estimated a 10- to 20-fold increased risk for celiac disease (CD) in patients with selective IgA deficiency (SIgAD). For this reason, screening for CD is mandatory in SIgAD patients, but it represents a special challenge since the specific IgA class antibodies against gliadin (AGA), endomysium (EMA), and tissue-transglutaminase (tTG) are not produced in patients with CD. IgG class counterparts of these antibodies may be informative; in particular IgG EMA has been demonstrated to be a valid marker for diagnosing CD in SIgAD cases, but it is not used much in clinical laboratories, because it is cumbersome and involves some technical difficulties. Even if it was widely used in clinical laboratories, the measuring of IgG AGA has shown a less-than-optimum diagnostic accuracy, so that now it tends to be substituted by tests for anti-tTG IgG, for which the few available studies have shown diagnostic performances superior to AGA. Since it is not known whether various available methods for measuring IgG anti-tTG antibodies offer similar diagnostic performances, we have compared the results obtained from nine second-generation commercial methods (D-tek, Phadia, Immco, Orgentec, Radim, Euroimmun, Inova, Aesku, Generic Assays), measuring IgG anti-tTG antibodies in 20 patients with CD and SIgAD and in 113 controls (9 patients with SIgAD without CD, 54 patients with chronic liver disease, and 50 healthy individuals). Diagnostic sensitivity, calculated by means of ROC plot analysis, ranged between 75% and 95%, and specificity ranged from 94% to 100%. In the same population, the diagnostic sensitivity and specificity of AGA IgG were 40% and 87%, respectively. Even though they perform differently, all IgG anti-tTG methods evaluated are reliable serological assays for the diagnosis of CD in SIgAD patients, with diagnostic accuracy superior to the AGA IgG method. The methods that use a mix of tTG and gliadin peptides as the antigenic preparation have a specificity slightly lower than that of the methods that use only tTG.
- Subjects :
- selective IgA deficiency
Population
antigliadin antibodies
Selective IgA deficiency
Chronic liver disease
Sensitivity and Specificity
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Serology
History and Philosophy of Science
Antigen
GTP-Binding Proteins
medicine
Humans
Protein Glutamine gamma Glutamyltransferase 2
education
education.field_of_study
Transglutaminases
biology
business.industry
General Neuroscience
IgA Deficiency
antideaminated gliadin peptides antibodies
Endomysium
medicine.disease
Immunoglobulin A
medicine.anatomical_structure
Immunology
biology.protein
IgG anti-tissue transglutaminases antibodies
Antibody
Gliadin
business
celiac disease
IgG anti-tissue transglutaminases antibodies, celiac disease, selective IgA deficiency, antigliadin antibodies, antideaminated gliadin peptides antibodies
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00778923
- Volume :
- 1109
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....f303617ebcfac3d3941d1a9cb9d6517a
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1196/annals.1398.025