What’s to blame for possible false positive “low gluten” test results using the Nima?

What’s to blame for possible false positive “low gluten” test results using the Nima?

Bottom line: Gluten Free Watchdog has personally tested many products using the Nima Sensor. One of the issues slowly emerging is what appear to be false positives (e.g., defined by Gluten Free Watchdog as products testing “low gluten” when tested with the Nima but less than 1 ppm when tested with the R5 ELISA) when testing certain types of samples. The gluten-free foods (and products free of gluten-containing ingredients) testing “low gluten” using the Nima have similar ingredients and consistencies.

Note: ALL products personally tested by Gluten Free Watchdog labeled gluten-free or appearing to be free of gluten containing ingredients testing “low gluten” using the Nima have been sent to the lab Bia Diagnostics for follow-up testing using the R5 ELISA Mendez Method*. All of these products have tested below the limit of quantification of 5 parts per million gluten and all but one of these products have tested below the limit of detection for gluten of 1 part per million.

Questions we’ve been pondering based on these findings:

  • Might these particular products have a very low limit of gluten detection when tested using the Nima? Maybe but not likely IF (and this is a very important if) the information from the Nima team is accurate. All but one of these particular products are testing below the limit of detection when tested using the R5 ELISA. This ELISA has a limit of detection (depending on the matrix) of 1 part per million of gluten.
    • The Nima Facebook page states, “The likelihood of Nima detecting 1 ppm is very slim. A majority of the time, we are detecting at or above 20.”
    • If this is accurate information (and we should know once a validation report is published), then there is something else going on with this device other than a very low limit of detection.
  • Given that the ingredients in these products are similar, might there be cross-reactivity between a particular ingredient and the antibody used by the sensor? All of the products testing “low gluten” using Nima and less than 1 ppm using the R5 contain either peanuts or almonds. But peanut butter tested “smiley face” when tested using the Nima. Other protein products such as raw chicken also tested “smiley face” suggesting that this is likely not a protein issue.
  • Might the consistency of the product result in a low gluten reading? As mentioned, the consistency of products testing low gluten is similar (see photo). All but one product are relatively homogeneous, “sticky” rather than crumbly—similar to children’s modeling clay. (Note: The crumbly, more heterogeneous product tested BLQ versus BLD). It has been suggested by a food-testing expert that the low gluten results may be due to a flow issue. If the consistency of the extraction is such that it causes slow movement up the test strip this could lead to a false positive reading. This is just a theory and it may not be correct.
  • And last but not least, might it be the case that there is no rhyme or reason to the results and all of the above speculation is simply wrong? Maybe this device simply doesn’t work the way the creators had hoped.

It is no secret how Gluten Free Watchdog feels about consumer lateral flow devices to test for gluten (you can read more about this at https://www.glutenfreewatchdog.org/news/lateral-flow-devices-nima-gluten-tox-home-ez-gluten-to-test-food-for-gluten-manufacturer-consumer-use/). Regardless, It is hoped that Gluten Free Watchdog’s investigation of the Nima Sensor helps uncover problems that can be addressed and fixed by the Nima team. The more (and quicker) this product can be improved the better.

Those of you using a Nima: Gluten Free Watchdog is very interested in learning about the foods you are testing that are resulting in a “low gluten” reading. Sharing this information may help us determine what is causing possible false positive low gluten results for some products.

Note: We are aware that the Nima team is updating “low/high gluten” readings with “gluten found.” Nevertheless, we are interested in hearing about your testing experiences prior to the update (For a variety of reasons, Gluten Free Watchdog’s devices are not synced to the app).

Products tested by Gluten Free Watchdog testing low gluten:

Product 1 Labeled Gluten-Free: Ingredients: Protein blend (whey protein isolate, milk protein isolate), isomalto-oligosaccharide (prebiotic fiber), Peanuts, Vegetable oils (palm, palm kernel oil), Sugar, Vegetable glycerin, Water, and Maltitol. Contains less than 2% of resistant maltodextrin, Salt, Soy lecithin, Natural flavor, Caramel color, Vanilla, Dextrose, Tapioca starch, Cocoa powder (processed with alkali), and Sucralose

  • R5 ELISA Results: BELOW the limit of detection of 1 ppm

Product 2 Labeled “Does not contain gluten or wheat ingredients”: Ingredients: Protein Blend (soy protein isolate, whey protein isolate, partially hydrolyzed milk protein isolate, casein, calcium caseinate), Fructose, Glucose syrup, Partially hydrolyzed peanut flour, Peanut butter (peanuts), Sugar, Water, Fractionated palm kernel oil, Natural flavor, Contains less than 2% of dextrose, sodium caseinate, salt, caramel added for color, soy lecithin, maltodextrin, tocopherols added to protect flavor, soybean oil

  • R5 ELISA Results: BELOW the limit of detection of 1 ppm

Product 3 Labeled Gluten-Free: Ingredients Protein blend (brown rice protein, pea protein), isomalto-oligosaccharides (prebiotic fiber), glycerine, roasted cocoa nibs, peanut butter (peanuts, salt, palm oil), peanut oil, peanuts, cocoa butter, peanut flour, sea salt, erythritol, almonds, monk fruit extract, stevia

  • R5 ELISA Results: BELOW the limit of detection of 1 ppm

Product 4 Labeled Gluten-Free: Protein Blend (Milk Protein Isolate, Whey Protein Isolate), Soluble Corn Fiber (Prebiotic Fiber), Peanuts, Water, Almonds, Natural Flavors, Erythritol, Palm Oil, Sea Salt, Calcium Carbonate, Sucralose, Steviol Glycosides (Stevia)

  • R5 ELISA Results: BELOW the limit of detection of 1 ppm

Product 5 Certified Gluten-Free by GFCO: Almonds, Gluten-free oats, Chocolate chunks (sugar, unsweetened chocolate, cocoa butter, soy lecithin, vanilla extract), Honey, Coconut, Organic cane sugar, Sunflower oil, Oat flour, Water, Vanilla extract, Sea salt, Cinnamon, Expresso powder

  • R5 ELISA Results: Below the limit of quantification of 5 ppm

Product 6 Certified Gluten-Free by GFCO: Ingredients: Dry roasted almonds, Honey powder (sugar, honey), Palm oil, Sea salt

  • R5 ELISA Results: BELOW the limit of detection of 1 ppm

*What is the “R5 ELISA Mendez Method”: Dr. Mendez and I wrote the following about this ELISA in our 2008 paper entitled, Commercial Assays to Assess Gluten Content of Gluten-Free Foods: Why They Are Not Created Equal (J Am Diet Assoc. 2008;108:1682-1687):

  • In 2006, the Codex Committee on Methods of Analysis and Sampling endorsed the sandwich R5 ELISA developed by Méndez as a type l method for determination of gluten content in gluten-free foods. This sandwich ELISA, which was validated in a collaborative trial conducted by the Prolamin Working Group, uses the gliadin standard developed by the Prolamin Working Group. It is based on the R5 monoclonal antibody to the potentially celiac toxic epitope (ie, antibody-binding site) QQPFP (glutamine-glutamine-proline-phenylalanine-proline) and some closely related sequences that are present in all wheat gliadins, rye secalins, and barley hordeins. In addition, it recognizes the potentially celiac toxic 33-mer (a 33-residue protein fragment). The FDA, in its proposed ruling on labeling of gluten-free foods, is tentatively considering using the sandwich R5 ELISA for gluten determination.”
    • The FDA has since stated that it will use the R5 ELISA Mendez Method as one of two methods when necessary for assessing compliance to the gluten-free labeling rule.

 

 

 

 

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Comments (10)

  • Madeline Reply

    I tested Nuts to You Nut Butter tahini, it is labelled gluten free.
    My NIMA detected ‘low gluten’ presence.

    April 17, 2017 at 4:00 pm
    • Tricia Thompson Reply

      Interesting, Madeline. Thanks for letting me know.

      April 17, 2017 at 4:04 pm
  • Erika Reply

    Many thanks to you, Tricia, for keeping those of us in the GF community informed. This is such important work you’re doing here. I am dismayed to hear of these results and saddened that we haven’t heard much from the Nima team. Folks using these devices would be well served to read this data and consider it carefully before heading to a public group and declaring a previously felt “safe” product to be unsafe. I have seen this repeatedly, with many companies then receiving and unfair trial and condemnation when, indeed, they are attempting to do right by the GF community. Disheartening.

    April 17, 2017 at 4:07 pm
  • Anon Reply

    It’s frustrating that they are changing the “Low Gluten/High Gluten” thing to just “Gluten Found”

    If it tests high gluten, I can have confidence there is gluten in the sample, but low gluten tells me it could be a false positive. Now there will be no way to tell after the firmware update.

    April 17, 2017 at 5:33 pm
    • Tricia Thompson Reply

      Updating is not required from what I understand. We will not be updating our devices. And I agree with you. Based on testing done to date, a high gluten reading does indeed appear to mean gluten is in the sample.

      April 17, 2017 at 5:37 pm
  • Chris B Reply

    I have had “low gluten” found in a baked good from a non-dedicated place (logical) and at a thai restaurant. The thai restaurant baffled me because the place is very careful, does steamed tofu so no fryer cross-contamination, separate woks, etc. The biggest risk is the sauces, but according to Nima, that wouldn’t be picked up.

    I think the biggest weakness of the Nima team has been their disclosures and descriptions of gluten found. First they said Nima wouldn’t detect under 20 ppm, then gave overlapping ranges for the smile and low gluten, indicating that between 5 and 20 ppm could test as either, then most recently they did a blog saying that the Nima will pick up any gluten so certified gluten free items may come back as gluten found if they contain under 20 ppm.

    *This is why people are confused, not our inability to wrap our heads around low and high gluten.*

    April 25, 2017 at 12:34 am
  • Brian Golden, MD Reply

    When Nima came out, my family was excited at the prospect we could better control our exposure to gluten. But my daughter’s TTG has been consistently elevated, despite our family being EXTREMELY careful about label-reading and cross-contamination, literally to the Nth degree. In an effort to try to find a cause of her contamination, we are testing a bunch of our commonly used foods, even some labeled gluten-free. Nima has come up with this “LOW GLUTEN” reading on a few surprising food items: Trader Joe’s organic canned pumpkin, FairLife low-fat chocolate milk, and Lipton Green tea (cranberry/pomegranate).

    I hope we can get to the “truth” regarding what is and what is not truly GF, but I am pretty frustrated about the state of our knowledge at the moment.

    November 10, 2017 at 6:48 pm
  • Warren Peterson Reply

    Tested Root Cology Betain Pepsin digestive enzyme…2 times… with the NIMA, and came up with “Contains Gluten”.
    It’s labeled as Gluten Free isn’t cheap. Is it possible for there to be false positives with the digestive enzymes? I really want to know, and use the Betain Pepsin… but not if it contains gluten!

    March 23, 2019 at 2:42 am

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