iTPA is the acronym for "intrathecal produced T. pallidum antibodies". It is used to assess neurosyphilis and is calculated as follows:
TPHA titre (CSF) / total IgG (CSF) × total IgG (serum) / TPHA titre (serum)
iTPA is the acronym for "intrathecal produced T. pallidum antibodies". It is used to assess neurosyphilis and is calculated as follows:
TPHA titre (CSF) / total IgG (CSF) × total IgG (serum) / TPHA titre (serum)
In the absence of antibody production against Treponema pallidum in the CNS, the ITpA index is 1 (0.5-2.0). A value > 2.0 indicates a specific antibody synthesis in the CNS, a value > 3.0 proves it with high reliability (sensitivity 84%, specificity 100%). If the ITpA is not calculated by ELISA but by titer levels, only a value > 4 is considered to be proof of autochthonous pathogen-specific antibody production due to the higher inaccuracy.
False-negative findings occur in secondary stage CNS infections and in vasculitic neurosyphilis.
Since the ITpA index and TPHA-AI (= modified ITpA index according to Reiber) only normalize over the course of years to decades after therapy, these antibody specificity indices (ASI) are not suitable as activity parameters.