Maria Vadalà1,2, Carmen Laurino1,2, Beniamino Palmieri2. 1. Department of General Surgery and Surgical Specialties, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia Medical School, Surgical Clinic, Modena, Italy. 2. Network of the Second Opinion, Modena, Italy.
Abstract
AIM: The aim of the study was to evaluate the clinical relevance, sensitivity and specificity of in vitro blood test, Memory Lymphocyte ImmunoStimulation Assay (MELISA®), in genetically predisposed patients that suffer by autoimmune/inflammatory syndrome induced by adjuvants, after HPV-vaccination and that could have a high metal hypersensitivity. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Sixteen girls (aged 12-24 years) that developed long-lasting and invalidating somatoform symptoms occurring within 20 days postvaccination are included in this descriptive study. The hypersensitivity to five metals (aluminum, nickel, mercury, methyl mercury, and thimerosal) was measured by MELISA® test. RESULTS: Seven girls showed negativity to all the five metals tested. The findings showed metal hypersensitivity only in nine patients: Toxicity to aluminum (two girls), reactivity to nickel (seven girls), followed by mercury (seven girls). CONCLUSION: The MELISA® assay is neither sensitive nor specific in detecting metal hypersensitivity and associated chronic diseases, including autoimmune pathologies.
AIM: The aim of the study was to evaluate the clinical relevance, sensitivity and specificity of in vitro blood test, Memory Lymphocyte ImmunoStimulation Assay (MELISA®), in genetically predisposed patients that suffer by autoimmune/inflammatory syndrome induced by adjuvants, after HPV-vaccination and that could have a high metalhypersensitivity. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Sixteen girls (aged 12-24 years) that developed long-lasting and invalidating somatoform symptoms occurring within 20 days postvaccination are included in this descriptive study. The hypersensitivity to five metals (aluminum, nickel, mercury, methyl mercury, and thimerosal) was measured by MELISA® test. RESULTS: Seven girls showed negativity to all the five metals tested. The findings showed metalhypersensitivity only in nine patients: Toxicity to aluminum (two girls), reactivity to nickel (seven girls), followed by mercury (seven girls). CONCLUSION: The MELISA® assay is neither sensitive nor specific in detecting metalhypersensitivity and associated chronic diseases, including autoimmune pathologies.
Entities:
Keywords:
Hypersensitivity; Memory Lymphocyte ImmunoStimulation Assay; metal; test
Several studies show that metals, including mercury, aluminum, nickel, methyl mercury thiosalicylate, thimerosal (used with aluminum as vaccine adjuvant) can be a risk factor for the development of various autoimmune pathologies, including autoimmune thyroiditis,[12] multiple sclerosis,[3] kidney disease,[4] and myalgia.[56] These metals act as immunosuppressants (cytostatically), or as immunoadjuvants (through nonspecific activation of the immune response),[78] resulting in cytokine release and abnormalities of the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis, and causing changes in the brain, fatigue, and severe psychological symptoms such as asthenia, severe pain, sleep disturbances, gastrointestinal, and neurological problems as are seen in chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, and autoimmune thyroiditis.[9] However, the metalhypersensitivity has been found most common in genetically predisposed individuals.[10] The enzymatic processes blocked by metals also result in chronic formation of metal-protein compounds (human leukocyte antigen [HLA] antigens or antigen-presenting macrophages) that the T-lymphocytes do not recognize, resulting in autoimmune reactions. The metals bind to SH-groups on proteins which can then be recognized as “foreign” and attacked by T-lymphocytes.[11]However, the interaction of T-lymphocytes with a metal determines the basis of the so-called Memory Lymphocyte ImmunoStimulation Assay (MELISA®), which detects the proliferation of memory lymphocytes (T-lymphocytes that had contact with a sensitizing allergen) after exposure to metals in vitro.[121314] We examined the findings of MELISA® Test in genetically predisposed patients that developed autoimmune/inflammatory syndrome induced by adjuvants (ASIA syndrome) after HPV vaccination.
Materials and Methods
Sixteen young girls, aged 12–24 years who developed clinical manifestations (such as asthenia, severe pain, skin rashes, sinus tachycardia, amenorrhea, optic neuritis, headache, and sleep disturbances) and elevated titers of autoantibodies (e.g., Anti-EBV, ANA, HLA) after HPV-vaccination, already referred to our “Second Opinion Medical Network for the evaluation of ASIA syndrome,” participated in this descriptive design[15] [Tables 1 and 2].
Table 1
Patients’ characteristics
Table 2
Autoimmune/inflammatory syndrome induced by adjuvants diagnostic criteria in our case series (Shoenfeld et al.)
Patients’ characteristicsAutoimmune/inflammatory syndrome induced by adjuvants diagnostic criteria in our case series (Shoenfeld et al.)The selected patients were informed, through an individual interview, and informed consent previously approved by the Local Institutional Review Board under the Helsinki Declaration.The blood sample of each girl was collected into six vacutainer tubes, containing sodium citrate, and sent to licensed Laboratory (InVitaLab Medizindiagnostik, Neuss, Germany).The choice of five metals for testing (aluminum, mercury, nickel, methylmercury, and thimerosal) was based on informations derived from possible exposure to adjuvant stimuli that may occur through HPV-vaccine administration.The lymphocytes were isolated from blood sample and subsequently cultured in medium containing 20% autologous inactivated human serum and incubated with 5% CO2 atmosphere for 30 min at 37°C in cell culture flasks for partial depletion of monocytes. After incubation, cells were counted, diluted with medium plus 10% serum in a concentration of 1 × 106 lymphocytes/ml and successively were cultured in 48-well tissue plates precoated with metal solutions in 2–3 concentrations; then, the plates were incubated for 5 days at 37°C with 5% CO2.Three negative controls (only lymphocytes in 10% medium) and one positive control (lymphocytes in 10% medium plus pokeweed mitogen) were included in each test. After 5 days, 600 μl of cell suspension from each well was transferred to a new 24-well plate (second monocyte depletion) and the cells incubated for 4 h.[16]The subsequent cell proliferation is measured by the incorporation of radioactive isotope 3H-thymidine in metal cultures. An increase in thymidine uptake could point to the presence of hypersensitivity to themetal tested. These findings are expressed as a stimulation index, calculated as the thymidine uptake in treated cultures divided by the mean isotope uptake in untreated control cultures [Table 3].
Table 3
Values of stimulation index
Values of stimulation index
Results
MELISA® test is directly dependent on lymphocyte concentration: the higher the lymphocyte concentration per test, the stronger the reactivity. In this study, the lymphocyte test detected seven patients (42%) who were negative to all the five metals tested and nine patients (53%) who were positive for at least one of the tested metals: toxicity to aluminum (two girls), and reactivity to nickel (four girls), followed to mercury (five girls) [Figure 1]. None of the patients responded to thimerosal and methyl mercury. Some patients had a metalallergy, such as eczema when wearing cheap metal earrings. Other metal exposures, including living in a polluted area (near steelworks), exposure to cigarette smoke were reported by 41% of the patients [Table 4].
Figure 1
Metal hypersensitivity to Memory Lymphocyte ImmunoStimulation Assay® test
Table 4
Description of metal exposure, lymphocyte responses, and stimulation index values for each patient
Metalhypersensitivity to Memory Lymphocyte ImmunoStimulation Assay® testDescription of metal exposure, lymphocyte responses, and stimulation index values for each patient
Discussion
Several studies of Prof. Stejskal (inventor of MELISA® test) reported frequent metalhypersensitivity (e.g., aluminum, nickel, mercury) in patients with chronic fatigue/fibromyalgia by MELISA® assay.[121718] Nevertheless, in 1997 Cederbrant et al. (coworker of Stejskal) compared the results of cutaneous patch test, conventional lymphocyte transformation test (LTT) and MELISA® test in 34 patients for detection of gold, nickel, and palladium and showed that the MELISA® assay had a low specificity (25%) and therefore was useless for diagnosis of metalhypersensitivity, since a large number of false-positive results could be obtained.[19] These false-positive reactions could be due to the use of higher metal concentrations that could result in nonspecific proliferation of the lymphocytes.[20] In 1999, the same author tested the validity of the MELISA® test and LTT for the detection of mercuryallergy in 62 dental amalgam-bearers (23 amalgam patients, 30 healthy blood donors with amalgam and 9 patients with oral lichen planus adjacent to dental amalgam) and in 10 healthy controls without amalgam (controls).[21] Thus, despite the use of low concentration of mercury solution (HgCl2 ≤0.5 μg/mL), a high frequency of positive results was obtained among healthy controls with or without dental amalgam. Consequently, the author concluded that MELISA® cannot be used as an objective marker for mercuryallergy in individuals with dental amalgam fillings. Indeed, already in 1998, the German Contact Allergy Group warned against the use of the MELISA® test for the detection of metalallergy.[22]Our findings could confirm the low sensitivity and specificity of the MELISA® test because we observed a high frequency of negative results (seven girls) and reactivity to mercury and nickel in patients that have orthodontics and nickelallergy (three and one girls, respectively).
Conclusion
We did not find in the literature evidence-based data supporting the MELISA® test as a reliable, unfailing, efficient and meaningful method for detection of metalhypersensitivity and associated diseases. Furthermore, the claim that metalhypersensitivity plays a striking role in immunological, neurological, and metabolic diseases (viz., in the vaccination adverse effects area), does not reach adequate clinical proof of concept and does not justify any chelating therapy to the patients in case of anecdotal positive results.