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DOI: 10.1055/s-0029-1241196
© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York
TSH Receptor Antibody (TRAb) Assays Based on the Human Monoclonal Autoantibody M22 are more Sensitive than Bovine TSH Based Assays
Publication History
received 02.06.2009
accepted 09.09.2009
Publication Date:
14 October 2009 (online)
Abstract
Measurements of TSH receptor autoantibodies (TRAb) using assays based on the human monoclonal TSH receptor autoantibody M22 or bovine TSH have been compared in 136 adult patients. They suffered from Graves’ disease (GD, n=62), Hashimoto's thyroiditis (HT, n=26), or non-autoimmune hyperthyroidism (NAH, n=48) and were selected on the basis of undetectable, borderline or low TRAb levels (0.6–3 IU/l) as measured by TSH based TRAb assay (Dynotest® TRAKhuman from BRAHMS). The time interval between initial diagnosis of GD and TRAb determination was high and ranged from 1 month to 3.5 years (median: 2.3 years). Using the kit manufacturer's cutoff values, 53/62 (85.5%) of the selected group of GD patients were TRAb positive (>0.4 IU/l) by M22 based TRAb ELISA (Medizym® TRAb clone, Medipan) and 45/62 (72.6%) were TRAb positive (>1.5 IU/l) by TSH based TRAb assay. In the HT group, 9/26 (34.6%) sera were positive in the M22 based ELISA and all but one of these 9 were positive or borderline in the TSH based assay. ROC plot analysis of the GD group using the NAH group as reference showed that at 95% specificity, the bovine TSH based TRAb assay had a sensitivity of 62.9% (cutoff for positivity=1.64 IU/l) and the M22 based TRAb ELISA a sensitivity of 90.3% (cutoff for positivity=0.32 IU/l). Overall therefore, the M22 based Medizym® TRAb clone assay is more sensitive than the bovine TSH based Dynotest® TRAK human assay.
Key words
thyroid - autoantibodies - TSH receptor - Graves’ disease - Hashimotos’ disease
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Correspondence
Priv-Doz. Dr. med. K. Zöphel
Department of Nuclear Medicine
Carl Gustav Carus Medical School
University of Technology
Dresden Fetscherstraße 74
01307 Dresden
Germany
Phone: +49/351/458 138 79
Fax: +49/351/458 53 47
Email: klaus.zoephel@uniklinikum-dresden.de