Abstract
Abstract
Objective
Neurological autoimmune peripheral and central nervous system disorders can be associated with anti-sulfatide antibodies. These antibodies are considered potential diagnostic biomarkers, although their additional diagnostic value in neurological fields has been increasingly questioned. Given the little evidence of anti-sulfatide antibodies’ frequency and diagnostic value in neurology, we aimed to fill this knowledge gap by investigating 10 years of data.
Methods
This retrospective study analyzed the results of the anti-ganglioside dot kits (GA Generic Assays GmbH) from 1318 serum samples and 462 cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples for the frequency, sensitivity, and specificity of anti-sulfatide antibodies in neurological disorders.
Results
Although anti-sulfatide antibodies are rarely present in neurological autoimmune disorders (serum IgM 2.5%, IgG 4.6%), they are also present in non-autoimmune diseases (serum IgM 1.2%, IgG 2.5%) and lack sensitivity and specificity towards being a diagnostic marker. Furthermore, anti-sulfatide antibodies are rarely found in CSF (e.g., no positive results for IgM), and including so-called borderline results ((+)) increases sensitivity and the false-positive rate in serum and CSF.
Discussion
While anti-sulfatide antibodies appear more frequently in neurological autoimmune diseases, they are rare overall and provide very limited diagnostic value in determining specific neurological diseases and—more importantly—if a neurological disease has a potential autoimmune etiology.
Funder
Medizinischen Fakultät, Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen
Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC