Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0268596 (EMA)
2,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have evaluated a commercial assay for serum IgA class antibodies to tissue transglutaminase, the enzyme identified as the major endomysial autoantigen in coeliac disease (CD). Sera were available from 130 adults diagnosed with CD in Southern Derbyshire between 01 01 97 and 31 12 99. Sera from 100 patients without villous atrophy on small intestinal biopsy were controls. The ability of the assay to detect abnormally low total IgA levels was assessed using sera from 18 subjects with IgA deficiency. Sensitivity and specificity of this IgA-anti tissue transglutaminase (tTGA) assay (86.2%, 91.0%) were inferior to endomysial antibody (EMA; 93.8%, 100%). tTGA has significantly higher sensitivity than IgA-antigliadin (76.2%). tTGA was appropriately undetectable (<0.03 U/mL) in 17 of 18 subjects with selective IgA deficiency. The high likelihood ratio (35) for tTGA at levels >9.0 U/mL and methodological advantages over EMA suggest that tTGA could be used as a first line diagnostic test for CD. At tTGA levels of 4-9 U/mL, use of EMA as a second line test would improve specificity.
...
PMID:IgA-antitissue transglutaminase: validation of a commercial assay for diagnosing coeliac disease. 1207 74

Coeliac disease is precipitated upon exposure to the dietary wheat gluten. Definitive diagnosis relies on intestinal biopsy and regression of clinical and histological disorders with adherence to a gluten-free diet. Coeliac disease is usually associated with a malabsorption syndrome. However, both atypical and silent clinical forms have been recently described and prevalence of the disease may be under-estimated. Serological tests have been developed in order to select candidates for intestinal biopsy, but these biological parameters are not suitable for screening in the general population. Indeed, antigliadin IgG antibodies have a poor specificity. antigliadin IgA antibodies a poor sensitivity. The detection of antiendomysial IgA antibodies (EmA) by immunofluorescence, although considered as the "gold standard" of serological coeliac disease markers, could not be automated, depends on a subjective fluorescence display, and may be limited by the degree of training of the observer. In year 1997, tissue transglutaminase (tTg) has been identified as the main autoantigen recognized by EmA. On this basis, solid-phase enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (Elisa) have been developed in order to potentially replace the EmA assay. Several commercial kits are now available but their diagnostic performances have not yet been compared. We selected 75 sera, including sera from 26 patients with coeliac disease in order to evaluate five commercial anti-tTG Elisa kits. For all patients, treated or not, detection of anti-tTG antibodies with four of the five tested kits correlates with EmA test. Kits using human tTG have the highest specificity, equivalent to the value of EMA test, and widely better than antigliadin antibodies. Anti-tTG Elisa kits using human tTG may be used as an alternative way to the EmA assay in the next future, and may supplant IgA anti-gliadin antibodies for coeliac disease screening.
...
PMID:[Relevance of anti-tissue transglutaminase antibodies in coeliac disease diagnosis]. 1280 13