Abstract
Glioma is the most common primary brain tumor, yet the high cost of diagnostic imaging has made early detection of asymptomatic glioma a formidable challenge. Thus, the development of a convenient, sensitive, and cost-effective diagnostic strategy, such as enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) based on glioma-specific and World Health Organization (WHO) grade-specific autoantibody serum markers, is necessary. To this end, a comparative proteomic analysis based on two-dimensional western blotting was carried out with the sera of glioma patients and normal controls. Of the 11 novel glioma-expressed autoantibodies, the autoantibody against glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) showed the highest differential expression. To investigate the potential clinical utility of the GFAP autoantibody as an early diagnostic marker for glioma, an ELISA-based assay was developed and validated with sera from glioma patients with WHO grades II (n = 19), III (n = 17), and IV (n = 24). The GFAP autoantibody level directly correlated with WHO grade and tumor volume. Sera from patients of non-glioma brain tumors, as well as non-brain tumors, showed much lower levels of GFAP autoantibody than those of the glioma patients, indicating that elevated GFAP autoantibody is specific to glioma patients. Analysis of the receiver operating characteristics curve suggested that the new ELISA has good distinguishing power and sensitivity for diagnosing glioma patients. This is the first ELISA assay developed for an autoantibody of a glioma antigen and may prove valuable for the clinical detection of glioma.
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