Publications by authors named "Andrew J Kuck"

Patients treated with erythropoietin-based erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs) can develop a rare but life-threatening condition called antibody-mediated pure red cell aplasia (amPRCA). The antibody characteristics in a nephrology patient with amPRCA include high antibody concentrations with neutralizing activity and a mixed IgG subclass including anti-ESA IgG4 antibodies. In contrast, anti-ESA IgG4 antibody is generally not detected in baseline samples and antibody-positive non-PRCA patients.

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Background: The immunological methods for detecting antibodies to erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs) differ in assay sensitivity. However, this parameter, routinely determined in clinical assays using a high-affinity non-human polyclonal antibody, gives a one-dimensional assessment of antibody detection. We compare three widely used immunological methods and evaluate the ability of each to detect mature human antibodies and human antibodies characteristic of an early immune response.

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Synopsis of recent research by authors named "Andrew J Kuck"

  • - Andrew J Kuck's research primarily focuses on the immunological aspects of erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs) and their association with antibody-mediated pure red cell aplasia (amPRCA), addressing the complex interactions between therapeutic antibodies and human immune responses.
  • - His 2013 study highlights the presence of anti-ESA IgG4 antibodies in patients with amPRCA, suggesting that these antibodies correlate with severe cases where high concentrations and neutralizing activity are observed.
  • - Kuck's earlier 2012 work compares various immunoassay platforms for detecting anti-ESA antibodies in both PRCA and non-PRCA patients, demonstrating differences in assay sensitivities and the importance of distinguishing between mature and early immune response antibodies.