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Diabetes-related autoantibodies


Also known as: Islet autoantibodies
Formal name: Islet cell cytoplasmic autoantibodies (ICA); insulin autoantibodies (IAA); glutamic acid decarboxylase autoantibodies (GADA); insulinoma-associated-2 autoantibodies (IA-2A)
Related tests: Glucose, insulin

At a Glance

Why Get Tested?

To help diagnose autoimmune type 1 diabetes; to help predict the development of type 1 diabetes in family members of those affected.

When to Get Tested?

When a patient is first diagnosed with diabetes to help determine whether their diabetes is autoimmune-related; when a person with non-insulin-treated diabetes has great difficulty achieving glycaemic control (e.g., cannot maintain normal or near-normal blood sugar levels)

Sample Required?

A blood sample drawn from a vein in your arm

The Test Sample

What is being tested?

Islet cell cytoplasmic autoantibodies (ICA), insulin autoantibodies (IAA), glutamic acid decarboxylase antibodies (GADA), and insulinoma-associated-2 autoantibodies (IA-2A) are a group of tests that measure diabetes-related autoantibodies. These autoantibodies do not cause type 1 diabetes but serve as markers of the body’s destructive immune response against its own cells that produce insulin (e.g., the beta cells in the pancreas). When about 80-90% of the beta cells are destroyed by the immune system, symptoms of diabetes such as frequent urination, thirst, weight loss, and poor wound healing occur. Without sufficient insulin action, hyperglycaemia results. If the symptoms are not detected and hyperglycaemia is not treated, a diabetic medical crisis can occur that can develop over a few weeks or even a few days.

The ICA test measures a group of islet cell autoantibodies targeted against a variety of islet cell proteins. It is a semi-quantitative test performed by indirect immunofluorescence. GADA and IA-2A are antibodies against two of the specific islet cell antigens. The only antigen believed to be highly specific to beta cells is insulin, and antibodies to insulin are abbreviated IAA. The IAA test does not differentiate whether the body’s immune system is making autoantibodies against insulin or if the immune system is making antibodies against insulin that has been injected (either human or animal) in the treatment of any type of diabetes. At present commercial assays for insulin antibodies are not accurate enough for clinical use. They are not recommended in the clinical investigation of autoimmune diabetes.

About 10% of all cases of diabetes are type 1 (autoimmune) in origin. Of these, about 75% are diagnosed in patients younger than 20 years old. Type 1 diabetes was previously known as juvenile or insulin-dependent diabetes but has been re-characterised to reflect beta cell destruction. Islet autoantibodies can be detected in the blood stream months to years before the development of type 1 diabetes. While nondiabetic individuals with islet autoantibodies are at high risk for the development of type 1 diabetes, not every person with islet autoantibodies will develop type 1 diabetes. When autoimmune type 1 diabetes is present, one or more of the diabetes autoantibodies will be present in about 95% of patients at the time of initial diagnosis.

How is the sample collected for testing?

A blood sample is obtained by inserting a needle into a vein in the arm.

The Test

Common Questions

Ask a Laboratory Scientist

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NOTE: This article is based on research that utilizes the sources cited here as well as the collective experience of the Lab Tests Online Editorial Review Board. This article is periodically reviewed by the Editorial Board and may be updated as a result of the review. Any new sources cited will be added to the list and distinguished from the original sources used.