Hook-effect in MAGLUMI immunoassay for serum anti-GAD antibodies in neurological disorders: When "wrong" matrix is the right choice

Clin Chim Acta. 2024 Apr 18;558:119679. doi: 10.1016/j.cca.2024.119679. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTAntibodies against glutamic acid decarboxylase (anti-GAD) are a valuable diagnostic tool to detect severe autoimmune conditions as type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) and anti-GAD related neurological disorders, having the latter more often anti-GAD concentrations in serum multiple times higher than in the former. Automated immunoassays, either with ELISA or chemiluminescent technology, are validated for diagnostic use in serum with analytical ranges suitable for T1DM diagnosis. In a patient presenting with a suspected autoimmune ataxia, anti-GAD testing on an automated chemiluminescent immunoassay (CLIA) resulted in slightly abnormal concentrations in serum (39.2 KIU/L) and very high concentrations in CSF (>280 KIU/L), thus prompting to proceed to serum dilutions to exclude a false negative result and a misdiagnosis. Different dilutions of serum resulted in nonlinear concentrations with endpoint result of 276,500 KIU/L at dilution 1:1000. CSF dilution was instead linear with endpoint result of 4050 KIU/L. In this case report we found that anti-GAD testing in CSF was essential to establish the clinical diagnosis and to suspect hook-effect in serum due to the excess of autoantibodies in this severe autoimmune condition.PMID:38642630 | DOI:10.1016/j.cca.2024.119679
Source: International Journal of Clinical Chemistry - Category: Chemistry Authors: Source Type: research