Anti-mitochondrial antibody (AMA) is considered the serological hallmark of primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC), but may be missing in a proportion of these patients. We assessed sensitivity and specificity of the currently available techniques for AMA detection in a large series of PBC patients and controls, and analysed their clinical and immunological features according to the AMA status. By indirect immunofluorescence on rat tissue sections and HEp-2 cells, Western immunoblot with bovine submitochondrial particles, and two ELISAs with AMA-specific recombinant proteins, we evaluated the presence of AMA in 127 PBC patients, 166 patients with type 1 autoimmune hepatitis and 100 with non alcoholic fatty liver disease. In PBC patients Western immunoblot detects AMA significantly more often than indirect immunofluorescence on HEp-2 cells (85%versus 72%, P = 0.02) or rodent tissue sections (71%, P = 0.01); both ELISAs are only slightly less sensitive than Western immunoblot (81% and 78%). Ten patients with non alcoholic fatty liver disease were AMA-positive by indirect immunofluorescence, but none recognized AMA-specific epitopes in Western immunoblot or in ELISAs. Twelve patients with type 1 autoimmune hepatitis were AMA-positive by indirect immunofluorescence, but only 6 (3.6%) reacted by Western immunoblot and ELISAs. Western immunoblot or ELISA should be regarded as first-line assay for the detection of AMA. Up to 15% of PBC patients are consistently AMA-negative, yet they share the same clinical, biochemical and histological features of AMA-positive PBC. Detection of AMA in type 1 autoimmune hepatitis might identify a subset of patients at risk of developing a hepatitic/cholestatic syndrome.

'True' antimitochondrial antibody-negative primary biliary cirrhosis, low sensitivity of the routine assays, or both? / MURATORI P; MURATORI L; GERSHWIN ME; CZAJA AJ; PAPPAS G; MACCARIELLO S; GRANITO A; CASSANI F; LORIA P; LENZI M; BIANCHI F.. - In: CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL IMMUNOLOGY. - ISSN 0009-9104. - STAMPA. - 135:(2004), pp. 154-158. [10.1046/j.1365-2249.2004.02332.x]

'True' antimitochondrial antibody-negative primary biliary cirrhosis, low sensitivity of the routine assays, or both?

MURATORI, PAOLO;MURATORI, LUIGI;MACCARIELLO, SILVANA;GRANITO, ALESSANDRO;LENZI, MARCO;BIANCHI, FRANCESCO BIANCO
2004

Abstract

Anti-mitochondrial antibody (AMA) is considered the serological hallmark of primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC), but may be missing in a proportion of these patients. We assessed sensitivity and specificity of the currently available techniques for AMA detection in a large series of PBC patients and controls, and analysed their clinical and immunological features according to the AMA status. By indirect immunofluorescence on rat tissue sections and HEp-2 cells, Western immunoblot with bovine submitochondrial particles, and two ELISAs with AMA-specific recombinant proteins, we evaluated the presence of AMA in 127 PBC patients, 166 patients with type 1 autoimmune hepatitis and 100 with non alcoholic fatty liver disease. In PBC patients Western immunoblot detects AMA significantly more often than indirect immunofluorescence on HEp-2 cells (85%versus 72%, P = 0.02) or rodent tissue sections (71%, P = 0.01); both ELISAs are only slightly less sensitive than Western immunoblot (81% and 78%). Ten patients with non alcoholic fatty liver disease were AMA-positive by indirect immunofluorescence, but none recognized AMA-specific epitopes in Western immunoblot or in ELISAs. Twelve patients with type 1 autoimmune hepatitis were AMA-positive by indirect immunofluorescence, but only 6 (3.6%) reacted by Western immunoblot and ELISAs. Western immunoblot or ELISA should be regarded as first-line assay for the detection of AMA. Up to 15% of PBC patients are consistently AMA-negative, yet they share the same clinical, biochemical and histological features of AMA-positive PBC. Detection of AMA in type 1 autoimmune hepatitis might identify a subset of patients at risk of developing a hepatitic/cholestatic syndrome.
2004
'True' antimitochondrial antibody-negative primary biliary cirrhosis, low sensitivity of the routine assays, or both? / MURATORI P; MURATORI L; GERSHWIN ME; CZAJA AJ; PAPPAS G; MACCARIELLO S; GRANITO A; CASSANI F; LORIA P; LENZI M; BIANCHI F.. - In: CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL IMMUNOLOGY. - ISSN 0009-9104. - STAMPA. - 135:(2004), pp. 154-158. [10.1046/j.1365-2249.2004.02332.x]
MURATORI P; MURATORI L; GERSHWIN ME; CZAJA AJ; PAPPAS G; MACCARIELLO S; GRANITO A; CASSANI F; LORIA P; LENZI M; BIANCHI F.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/722
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