21 research outputs found
The effects of somatic mutations on EGFR interaction with anti-EGFR monoclonal antibodies: Implication for acquired resistance
Trends in therapeutic antibody affinity maturation: From in-vitro towards next-generation sequencing approaches
Advantage of using a home-made elisa kit for detection of Helicobacter pylori infection over commercially imported kits
Purpose: To evaluate a home-made ELISA kit for detection of
Helicobacter pylori (Hp) infection and comparison of its immunologic
criteria with those of foreign commercial kits. Methods: A home-made
IgG ELISA kit was developed using soluble antigenic fractions of Hp
proteins. Confirmed sera were tested and serological criteria were
evaluated through assessment of 199 serum samples. Results: The
accuracy, sensitivity and specificity values of home-made kit were 92,
92 and 90.4%, respectively. These immunologic criteria for Trinity kit
were 95.2, 95.2 and 95% in comparison with IBL kit (91.3, 92.2 and
88.5%), BIOHIT kit (72.4, 41.6 and 94.1%) and HelicoBlot2.1 (94.2, 93.4
and 100%). Kappa agreement assessment demonstrated that two of the
imported ELISA kits had fair to moderate agreement with the home-made
kit while the other one had a poor agreement value. Conclusions: Apart
from comparable values between the home-made kit and the most efficient
imported kit (Trinity) there was significant cost benefit. Therefore,
we recommend the home-made kit as a suitable substitution for detection
of Hp infection in the Iranian population
