Höftberger, Romana
Sabater Baudet, Lidia
Marignier, Romain
Aboul-Enein, Fahmy
Bernard-Valnet, Raphaël
Rauschka, Helmut
Ruiz, Anne
Blanco Morgado, Yolanda
Graus Ribas, Francesc
Dalmau Obrador, Josep
Saiz Hinarejos, Albert
2018-07-24T12:57:29Z
2018-07-24T12:57:29Z
2013-11-04
2018-07-24T12:57:29Z
Cell-based assays (CBA) have increased the sensitivity of the neuromyelitis optica (NMO)-IgG/aquaporin-4-antibody detection compared to classical tissue-based indirect assays. We describe the sensitivity of an optimized immunohistochemistry (IHC-o) to detect NMO-IgG/aquaporin-4-antibody in comparison with that of two CBA: an in-house (CBA-ih) and a commercial (CBA-c) assay (Euroimmun, Germany). Coded serum from 103 patients with definite NMO and 122 inflammatory controls were studied by IHC-o, CBA-ih, and CBA-c. IHC-o used the same protocol described to detect antibodies against cell surface antigens. CBA-ih used live cells transfected with the aquaporin-4-M23-isoform. The sensitivity of the IHC-o was 74.8% (95% confidence interval [CI] 65-83) and was similar to that of the CBA-ih 75.7% (95% CI 66-84) and the CBA-c 73.8% (95% CI 64-82). The specificity of the three assays was 100% (95% CI 97-100). Interassay concordance was high, 100 of 103 samples were coincident in all techniques. The optimized immunohistochemistry proves to be as sensitive and specific as the cell-based assays. This assay extends the available tools for NMO-IgG/aquaporin-4-antibody detection.
Anglès
Immunohistoquímica; Immunoglobulines; Immunohistochemistry; Immunoglobulins
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0079083
PLoS One, 2013, vol. 8, num. 11, p. 1-6
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0079083
cc-by (c) Höftberger, Romana et al., 2013
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es