D A Elphick1, K Kapur. 1. Department of Gastroenterology, Barnsley District General Hospital, Barnsley, UK. elphickdh@hotmail.com
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The urine pancreolauryl ratio (uPLR) and, more recently, the faecal pancreatic elastase-1, are widely used for the noninvasive diagnosis of exocrine pancreatic insufficiency. Both tests have previously been validated against 'gold standard' tests of pancreatic function, but their use in a clinical setting has never been directly compared. METHODS: We performed a comparative study of the pancreolauryl ratio (PLR) and the faecal elastase-1 (FE-1) test in patients with a clinical suspicion for pancreatic insufficiency. The results were compared with the clinical response to pancreatic enzyme supplementation using pre-defined criteria. RESULTS: Forty-five patients were enrolled in the study and 33 were given a trial of pancreatic enzyme supplementation. Twenty-four out of these 33 showed a positive clinical response to enzyme supplements. Of the 24 responders, 19 had positive FE-1 (<200 microg/g faeces), but only 12 had a positive uPLR (<20). There was a significant correlation between the FE-1 result and clinical response to enzyme supplements (p = 0.01), but not between the PLR and clinical response (p = 0.15). CONCLUSIONS: FE-1 is a simpler test for the patient to perform and more accurately predicts the response to pancreatic enzyme supplementation in patients with chronic, unexplained diarrhoea with a clinical suspicion of pancreatic insufficiency than the PLR. This makes the FE-1 of greater use in clinical practice than the PLR.
BACKGROUND: The urine pancreolauryl ratio (uPLR) and, more recently, the faecal pancreatic elastase-1, are widely used for the noninvasive diagnosis of exocrine pancreatic insufficiency. Both tests have previously been validated against 'gold standard' tests of pancreatic function, but their use in a clinical setting has never been directly compared. METHODS: We performed a comparative study of the pancreolauryl ratio (PLR) and the faecal elastase-1 (FE-1) test in patients with a clinical suspicion for pancreatic insufficiency. The results were compared with the clinical response to pancreatic enzyme supplementation using pre-defined criteria. RESULTS: Forty-five patients were enrolled in the study and 33 were given a trial of pancreatic enzyme supplementation. Twenty-four out of these 33 showed a positive clinical response to enzyme supplements. Of the 24 responders, 19 had positive FE-1 (<200 microg/g faeces), but only 12 had a positive uPLR (<20). There was a significant correlation between the FE-1 result and clinical response to enzyme supplements (p = 0.01), but not between the PLR and clinical response (p = 0.15). CONCLUSIONS: FE-1 is a simpler test for the patient to perform and more accurately predicts the response to pancreatic enzyme supplementation in patients with chronic, unexplained diarrhoea with a clinical suspicion of pancreatic insufficiency than the PLR. This makes the FE-1 of greater use in clinical practice than the PLR.
Authors: Ramesh P Arasaradnam; Steven Brown; Alastair Forbes; Mark R Fox; Pali Hungin; Lawrence Kelman; Giles Major; Michelle O'Connor; Dave S Sanders; Rakesh Sinha; Stephen Charles Smith; Paul Thomas; Julian R F Walters Journal: Gut Date: 2018-04-13 Impact factor: 23.059