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Original Articles

Evaluation of a Microsphere‐Based Flow Cytometric Assay for Diagnosis of Celiac Disease

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Pages 345-357 | Received 24 Mar 2004, Accepted 22 Apr 2004, Published online: 20 Aug 2006
 

Abstract

The multiplexed particle‐based flow cytometric technology proposes a new approach for the diagnosis of autoimmune diseases combining the advantages of conventional methods with the ability to quantitatively determine multiple autoantibodies in the same sample, simultaneously and rapidly. Recently, a commercial kit (FIDIS Celiac, Biomedical Diagnostics, Marne la Vallé, France) was introduced for the simultaneous detection of IgA anti‐tissue transglutaminase (anti‐tTG), IgG, and IgA anti‐gliadin antibodies (AGA). This study was undertaken to evaluate and compare the FIDIS Celiac kit with standardized commercial ELISAs (QUANTA Lite, INOVA Diagnostics Inc., San Diego, CA). A disease group consisted of 21 samples from untreated patients with biopsy confirmed celiac disease (CD), and two control groups of historical sera (207 from regular blood donors and 181 from chronically infected hepatitis patients) were studied. All control sera were negative for IgA anti‐endomysial antibodies (EmA) and had an IgA concentration above the lower normal limit. Concerning the reproducibility, intra‐ and inter‐assay coefficients of variation (CVs) ranging between 2% and 12%, and between 3% and 21%, respectively, were observed. Regarding the diagnostic quality, each assay was compared to the disease diagnosis using the McNemar test and the kappa (K) parameter, while ROC analysis was applied. Generally, the performance of FIDIS assay was proved almost equally adequate to that of ELISA in the detection of IgA anti‐tTG antibodies, IgA and IgG AGA. However, the performance of FIDIS assay was found surmounting that of ELISA among hepatitis patients, possibly due to the avoidance of debris and unbound cross contaminants and, hence, the “noise” of such materials in samples under analysis. Taking our results together with the simplicity and the high throughput of FIDIS assay, its overall performance in the diagnosis of CD seems better than that of ELISA.

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