Anti-TIF-1γ Antibody Detection Using a Commercial Kit vs In-House Immunoblot : Usefulness in Clinical Practice

Anaís Mariscal, Milena Milán, Andrés Baucells, Maria Angeles Martínez, Andrea Garcia Guillen, Ernesto Trallero-Araguás, Marcelo Alvarado, Laura Martinez-Martinez, Leticia Alserawan, Teresa Franco-Leyva, María Teresa Sanz-Martínez, Laura Viñas-Giménez, Hèctor Corominas, Candido Juarez, Ivan Castellvi, Albert Selva O'Callaghan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

4 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Anti-TIF-1γ autoantibody detection is important for cancer screening in patients with dermatomyositis. The gold standard for anti-TIF-1γ detection, immunoprecipitation, is only available from a few specialized laboratories worldwide, so commercial ELISA/immunoblot tests have emerged in recent years. To analyze their usefulness in diagnosing cancer-associated dermatomyositis, we compared Euroimmun Euroline profile with our previously validated in-house immunoblot assay with human recombinant TIF-1γ. We included 308 adult patients from Hospital de la Santa Creu I Sant Pau and Vall Hebrón Hospital (Barcelona, Spain) tested for anti-TIF-1γ autoantibodies using the Euroline profile and an in-house immunoblot assay. A total of 27 anti-TIF-1γ were detected by the Euroline and 12 by the in-house assay. Fair agreement was observed between Euroline and the in-house immunoblot Cohen's kappa 0.3163. Expected prevalence of anti-TIF-1γ autoantibodies was observed for the two methods for dermatomyositis and undifferentiated connective tissue diseases, but unexpectedly high prevalence of anti-TIF-1γ autoantibodies was detected by Euroline compared to the in-house immunoblot for other diseases (16.5% Euroline vs 0.8% in-house immunoblot, p<0.01). The in-house IB compared to Euroline more reliably detected cancer in patients with DM with anti-TIF-1γ antibodies (p=0.0014 vs p=0.0502 for in-house immunoblot vs Euroline). We recommend using a second validated method to confirm Euroline-detected anti-TIF-1γ antibodies when the dermatomyositis diagnosis is not definitive. Furthermore, in the context of definite DM diagnosis with negative anti-TIF-1γ antibodies by Euroline and no other myositis specific antibody, is also recommendable to confirm by a second validated method.
Original languageEnglish
JournalFrontiers in Immunology
Volume11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

Keywords

  • Dermatomyositis
  • Cancer
  • Autoantibody
  • Diagnosis
  • Immunoassay

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