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  • Title: Course of islet autoantibody titers during Ig-immunoadsorption in a patient with newly diagnosed type 1 diabetes.
    Author: Seidel DK, Geiss HC, Donner MG, Ritter MM, Schwandt P, Koll RA, Standl E, Ziegler AG.
    Journal: J Autoimmun; 1998 Jun; 11(3):273-7. PubMed ID: 9693976.
    Abstract:
    The purpose of this study was to determine whether and to what extent diabetes-specific autoantibodies can be removed from the plasma by Ig-immunoadsorption therapy. We followed the course of islet cell antibodies (ICA), insulin antibodies (I[A]A), glutamic acid decarboxylase antibodies (GADA) and antibodies to the protein tyrosine phosphatase IA-2 (IA2A) in a patient with newly diagnosed insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) under multiple immunoadsorption treatments over 6 months. Autoantibodies were not removed from the plasma as efficiently as expected when compared to the removal of total immunoglobulin (IgG). Whereas IgG levels were lowered by 70-90% through each immunoadsorption treatment, antibodies to insulin were reduced by an average of 83%, IA2A by 36% and GADA by only 9% directly after treatment. ICA were > 320 JDF U at diabetes onset and remained above this level. During the 6 months of multiple immunoadsorption therapies, I[A]A levels showed a 24-fold increase due to stimulation of insulin antibody production by exogenous insulin substitution, IA2A levels remained unchanged (average 6% increase), and GADA levels were reduced by an average of 39% compared to antibody titers at onset. All four antibodies were highly positive in the eluate from the immunoadsorption columns. We showed that antibodies to pancreatic islet cells can be reduced by immunoadsorption, but as for plasmapheresis the effect is incomplete and transient for most of the antibodies. If there is clinical benefit through immunoadsorption therapy--as has been shown for newly diagnosed IDDM patients treated with plasmapheresis--our data suggest that this may be due to factors other than the sufficient removal of antibodies.
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