1. Sensitive detection of multiple islet autoantibodies in type 1 diabetes using small sample volumes by agglutination-PCR.
- Author
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Cortez FJ, Gebhart D, Robinson PV, Seftel D, Pourmandi N, Owyoung J, Bertozzi CR, Wilson DM, Maahs DM, Buckingham BA, Mills JR, Roforth MM, Pittock SJ, McKeon A, Page K, Wolf WA, Sanda S, Speake C, Greenbaum CJ, and Tsai CT
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Glutamate Decarboxylase immunology, Humans, Insulin Antibodies immunology, Male, Mass Screening, Polymerase Chain Reaction methods, Sensitivity and Specificity, Young Adult, Agglutination immunology, Autoantibodies immunology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 immunology, Islets of Langerhans immunology
- Abstract
Islet autoantibodies are predominantly measured by radioassay to facilitate risk assessment and diagnosis of type 1 diabetes. However, the reliance on radioactive components, large sample volumes and limited throughput renders radioassay testing costly and challenging. We developed a multiplex analysis platform based on antibody detection by agglutination-PCR (ADAP) for the sample-sparing measurement of GAD, IA-2 and insulin autoantibodies/antibodies in 1 μL serum. The assay was developed and validated in 7 distinct cohorts (n = 858) with the majority of the cohorts blinded prior to analysis. Measurements from the ADAP assay were compared to radioassay to determine correlation, concordance, agreement, clinical sensitivity and specificity. The average overall agreement between ADAP and radioassay was above 91%. The average clinical sensitivity and specificity were 96% and 97%. In the IASP 2018 workshop, ADAP achieved the highest sensitivity of all assays tested at 95% specificity (AS95) rating for GAD and IA-2 autoantibodies and top-tier performance for insulin autoantibodies. Furthermore, ADAP correctly identified 95% high-risk individuals with two or more autoantibodies by radioassay amongst 39 relatives of T1D patients tested. In conclusion, the new ADAP assay can reliably detect the three cardinal islet autoantibodies/antibodies in 1μL serum with high sensitivity. This novel assay may improve pediatric testing compliance and facilitate easier community-wide screening for islet autoantibodies., Competing Interests: FJC, DG, JO, NP, PVR, DS and CTT are employed by Enable Biosciences. FJC, DG, PVR, DS and CTT are shareholders of Enable Biosciences. PVR and CTT are inventors of the ADAP patent licensed from University of California, Berkeley to Enable Biosciences. The ADAP assay used in this assay is a product in development. This does not alter our adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials.
- Published
- 2020
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