Increased levels of bovine serum albumin antibodies in patients with type 1 diabetes and celiac disease-related antibodies.

2003 
Objectives To detect the presence of antibodies against bovine serum albumin in a cohort of Spanish patients with type 1 insulin-dependent diabetes. Methods Antibodies were measured using an in-house enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay test in 80 patients with type 1 diabetes, subdivided according to the presence or absence in their serum of celiac disease-related antibodies. For comparison, 30 patients with celiac disease (nondiabetic), 13 patients with autoimmune thyroiditis, and 45 healthy volunteers were used. Results Thirty-one percent of patients with diabetes yielded a positive result, with a mean value of 26.1 ± 21.8 arbitrary units (AU). If the group was split into those with celiac disease-related antibodies and those lacking them, the percentages were 53% and 25%, respectively, with a mean value of 39.6 ± 28.4 AU and 22.4 ± 18.3 AU (P = 0.003), respectively. Seventy-three percent of celiac patients showed bovine serum albumin antibodies with a mean level of 38.8 ± 27.7 AU, comparable to that of patients with diabetes with celiac antibodies, but higher than the group lacking them (P = 0.001). Although 46% of patients with autoimmune thyroiditis had positive results, the level detected (22.1 ± 8.7 AU) was significantly lower than that recorded in patients with type 1 diabetes who had celiac disease antibodies (P = 0.04) and celiac patients (P = 0.04). Healthy volunteers showed no antibodies against bovine serum albumin. Conclusions These data suggest that bovine serum albumin antibodies appears in patients with a compromised epithelial permeability, and they reflect a general defect in the process of immunologic tolerance associated with a predisposition to autoimmunity, rather than immunity specific to β cells.
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