Augustine George, Johannes Lotz, Maximilian Luffy, Anna-Lena Ganz, Jan Wolf, George J Kahaly
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Thyroid-blocking immunoglobulins (TBI) are present in 10%-15% of patients with autoimmune thyroid disease (AITD). TBI affect thyroid function. The analytical performance of a novel TBI bioassay was evaluated.
Methods: Sera from AITD patients were tested with a cell-based TBI reporter bioassay (Thyretain®) with the expression of a luciferase transgene as readout and a new "Turbo™" TBI bioassay with a readout based on a cyclic AMP-activated luciferase. All samples were also run on two TSH-R binding immunoassays. A Passing-Bablok regression, a Bland-Altman plot, and user/lot comparisons were performed. In addition, dose-response curves for Turbo and Thyretain were fitted using serial dilutions, and half-maximal and 80% inhibitory concentrations (IC50/IC80) were compared.
Results: Of 1,011 unselected AITD patients, 131 patients (212 samples) were TBI positive. Of the 212 samples, 149 (70.3%), 47 (22%), and 16 (7.5%) were hypothyroid, euthyroid, and hyperthyroid, respectively. The three thyrotropin receptor antibody (TSH-R-Ab) assays were negative in 90 controls devoid of autoimmune thyroid disorders. In contrast, the Turbo cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP) TBI, Thyretain TBI, and the binding assays detected TBI in 212 (100%), 168 (79%), and 138/180 (65%) samples, respectively (p< 0.001). Turbo highly correlated with thyroid function (p< 0.001). The percentage inhibition in both Turbo and Thyretain correlated with TSH-R-Ab binding assay positivity (both p< 0.001). The two bioassays correlated (r = 0.8, p< 0.001), and the Bland-Altman plot displayed no significant bias (0.24). Values scatter with slight systemic deviation between TBI mean values of 10%-50% inhibition, with higher Turbo than Thyretain results. Intra-assay validation demonstrated adequate precision with a very low coefficient of variation (average CV 5.4%) and lower CV with samples with a high inhibitory effect (CVAverage= 1.7% for a sample with 95% inhibition Thyretain). CV did not differ between users (p = 0.35) and lots (p = 0.121). The IC50/IC80 values were 1.55 ng/mL/3.48 ng/mL for Turbo and 6.76 ng/mL/18.46 ng/mL for Thyretain, respectively, demonstrating the markedly higher sensitivity of Turbo.
Conclusions: The novel, easy-to-perform, rapid, and reliable Turbo TSH-R blocking bioassay detected significantly more TBI than the established immunoassays, emphasizing its higher analytical performance and clinical utility in the management of patients with AITD.
期刊介绍:
Frontiers in Endocrinology is a field journal of the "Frontiers in" journal series.
In today’s world, endocrinology is becoming increasingly important as it underlies many of the challenges societies face - from obesity and diabetes to reproduction, population control and aging. Endocrinology covers a broad field from basic molecular and cellular communication through to clinical care and some of the most crucial public health issues. The journal, thus, welcomes outstanding contributions in any domain of endocrinology.
Frontiers in Endocrinology publishes articles on the most outstanding discoveries across a wide research spectrum of Endocrinology. The mission of Frontiers in Endocrinology is to bring all relevant Endocrinology areas together on a single platform.