Comparison of insulin autoantibody: polyethylene glycol and micro-IAA 1-day and 7-day assays

2009 
Background Older studies of diabetes development typically utilized a 7-day incubation polyethylene glycol competitive insulin autoantibody assay (CIAA). Our standard micro-IAA assay (mIAA) utilizes precipitation with proteins A/G and 1-day incubation (1-day mIAA), but is less sensitive compared to the CIAA assay. Methods We performed CIAA and mIAA assays in various conditions. We analyzed serum samples from 446 type 1 diabetes patients, from another set of 247 type 1 diabetes patients within 2 weeks of initiation of insulin treatment, from 150 healthy control donors, from 22 healthy participants in the diabetes autoimmunity study in the young (DAISY), and also coded sera from 50 patients with newly diagnosed type 1 diabetes and 50 blood donor control samples. Results In the process of our study, we found that the key condition was the incubation time. Therefore, we extended the incubation time to 7 days (7-day mIAA assay). No CIAA-negative control was positive with either 1-day or 7-day mIAA. In a new onset type 1 diabetes and at risk cohorts (DAISY study), the 7-day mIAA identified an additional 18% as being positive along with 16% of those who were initially 1-day mIAA negative and CIAA positive. Most subjects detectable only with the 7-day mIAA assay had intermediate levels of CIAA (80–300 nU/mL) (p = 0.01). Conclusions The 7-day mIAA assay identifies a small but significant additional subset of individuals positive on the CIAA assay, while preserving specificity. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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