| Literature DB >> 20186307 |
Cansel Turkay1, Benan Kasapoglu.
Abstract
The inflammatory bowel diseases, consisting of Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis and indeterminate colitis, are distinguished by idiopathic and chronic inflammation of the digestive tract. The distinction between inflammatory bowel diseases and functional bowel disorders, such as irritable bowel syndrome, can be complex because they often present with similar symptoms. Rapid and inexpensive noninvasive tests that are sensitive, specific and simple are needed to prevent patient discomfort, delay in diagnosis, and unnecessary costs. None of the current commercially available serological biomarker tests can be used as a stand-alone diagnostic in clinics. Instead, these are used as an adjunct to endoscopy in diagnosis and prognosis of the disease. Along these lines,, fecal lactoferrin and calprotectin tests seem to be one step further from other tests with larger number of studies, higher sensitivity and specificity and wider availability.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnosis; Fecal markers; Inflammatory bowel disease; Serology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20186307 PMCID: PMC2827710 DOI: 10.1590/S1807-59322010000200015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clinics (Sao Paulo) ISSN: 1807-5932 Impact factor: 2.365
Some recent studies about the fecal markers in the evaluation of IBD
| Study | Aim | Patient | Result | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| To investigate the role of FC in evaluating IBD activity | 65 IBD and 20 IBS patients | ESR, CRP, and FCP values were higher in the IBD patients than in the control group, while the hgb level was lower in the IBD group. No statistically significant differences in FCP levels were detected between UC and CD patients. | FC was found to be strongly associated with colorectal inflammation indicating organic disease. | |
| To evaluate the correlation between endoscopic disease activity and FC, CAI, CRP, and blood leukocytes in UC | 134 UC patients and 48 controls | FC levels were significantly lower in UC patients with inactive disease. The overall accuracy for the detection of endoscopically active disease was 89% for FC, 73% for CAI, 62% for elevated CRP, and 60% for leukocytosis. | FC was the only marker that reliably discriminated inactive from active disease, emphasizing its usefulness for activity monitoring. | |
| To evaluate the diagnostic utility of the assessment of FC concentration in patients with CD. | 31 CD and 12 IBS patients | Mean FC concentration in CD group was statistically higher than among IBS patients. There was a positive correlation between FC concentration and CRP, and negative--with hemoglobin concentration. | The assessment of FC concentration may be useful in differential diagnoses of CD and monitoring patients with CD. | |
| To determine the role of FC and FL in the prediction of IBD relapses | 89 CD, 74 UC patients | Sensitivity and specificity to predict relapse of IBD for FC (>150 microg/g) and FL were 69% and 69%, and 62% and 65%, respectively. | FC and FL determination may be useful in predicting impending clinical relapse--in both CD and UC patients. | |
| To assess the role of calprotectin tests in predicting clinical relapse in IBD patients. | 97 UC and 65 CD | A significant correlation emerged between a positive FC test and the probability of relapse in UC patients. In CD patients, only cases of colonic CD showed a significant correlation between a positive FC test and the probability of relapse. | Measuring calprotectin may help to identify UC and colonic CD patients at higher risk of clinical relapse. | |
| To investigate fecal tumor M2-PK in the differentiation of functional from organic bowel disease. | 94 controls and 105 outpatients of whom 14 were diagnosed with organic bowel disease later | Sensitivity and specificity, for diagnosis of organic bowel disease were 93%, 92% for FC and 67%, 88% for tumor M2-PK, respectively. | Tumor M2-PK is able to differentiate organic from functional bowel disease but has a lower sensitivity, specificity, and predictive value than FC. | |
| To evaluate FC as a marker of treatment outcome of relapse of IBD and, to compare FC with fecal myeloperoxidase (MPO) and fecal eosinophil protein X (EPX) | 27 UC and 11 CD patients | A normalised FC level at the end of the study predicted a complete response in 100% patients, whereas elevated FC level predicted incomplete response in 30%. Normalised MPO or EPX levels predicted a complete response in 100% and 90% of the patients, respectively. However, elevated MPO or EPX levels predicted incomplete response in 23% and 22%, respectively. | A normalised FC level has the potential to be used as a surrogate marker for successful treatment outcome in IBD patients. FC and MPO provide superior discrimination than EPX in IBD treatment outcome. | |
| To evaluate FC and FL in identifying CD recurrence in symptomatic patients after ileocaecal resection | 117 CD patients | In patients with mild to moderately clinically active disease, FC and FL identified individuals with and without recurrent IBD. Faecal markers were more accurate at predicting clinical disease activity than CRP, platelet count or endoscopic appearance. | FC and FL are non-invasive tests that can help to identify disease recurrence in symptomatic postoperative patients. | |
| To identify new noninvasive test combinations for characterization of IBD in children and adolescents by comparing serological responses to microbial antigens. | 73 children who underwent endoscopies because of suspicion of IBD and IBD was diagnosed in 60 patients (18 CD, 36 UC, 6 IC). | FC levels were elevated more frequently in IBD patients (89% vs 9%). ASCA antibodies were detected in 67% of patients with CD, The combination of the measurements of FC and serological responses to microbial antigens (ASCA, I2, and OmpW) identified 100% of CD patients (specificity 36%) and 89% of UC patients (specificity 36%). | Increased levels of serological responses to microbial antigens (ASCA, I2, and OmpW) and FC are evident in both CD and UC patients. The combination of these markers provides valuable, noninvasive tools for the diagnosis of IBD. | |
| To compare FC levels in IBD and healthy controls, to correlate FC levels with clinical disease activity, | 32 IBD patients and 34 healthy controls | The IBD group had higher FC levels compared with control. Among those with clinical relapse, 90% had FC levels more than 400 mug/g in CD. Eighty-nine percent of CD encounters with FC levels less than 400 mug/g remained in clinical remission. | Among children with CD and in remission, FC levels may be useful in predicting impending clinical relapse. | |
| To investigate possibility and clinical application of FC in determining disease activity of UC | 66 UC and 20 control patients | The FC concentration in the patients with active UC was significantly higher than inactive UC which was higher than the control group. There was a strong correlation between the FC concentration and the endoscopic gradings for UC. | FC can reflect the disease activity of UC and can be used as a rational marker for intestinal inflammation in clinical practice. | |
| To investigate FC as a biomarker in predicting the clinical course of acute severe UC | 90 patients with acute severe UC requiring intensive in-patient medical therapy | FC was significantly higher in patients requiring colectomy, with a trend toward significance when comparing corticosteroid nonresponders and responders, as well as between infliximab nonresponders and responders | FC levels are dramatically elevated in severe UC. This biomarker can predict response to first or second-line medical therapy in this setting. | |
| To study the correlation of FC and FL with simple endoscopic score for Crohn’s disease (SES-CD) and histology. | 24 CD patients with 87 ileocolonoscopies | In ileocolonic or colonic disease, both FC and FL correlated significantly with colon SES-CD and colon histology. In patients with normal FC or FL levels, endoscopic and histology scores were significantly lower than in those with elevated concentrations. | In ileocolonic and colonic disease, endoscopic score SES-CD and histological findings correlated significantly with FC and FL. | |
| To compare the performance of FL, FC, polymorphonuclear neutrophil elastase (PMN-e), and CRP in patients with IBD to address whether these markers can differentiate IBD patients with endoscopically assessed inflammation;and they correlate with endoscopic severity of inflammation | 54 IBS, 42 UC, 43 CD patients | UC or CD patients with active inflammation demonstrated significantly higher levels of FL, FC, and PMN-e in feces as well as serum-CRP when compared to patients with inactive inflammation and patients with IBS. FC showed the highest diagnostic accuracy in CD (81.4%), whereas FL was superior to the other markers in UC (83.3%). The comprehensive activity index yielded a further improvement of sensitivity and specificity, with a diagnostic accuracy of 95.3% for UC patients. | The fecal markers FL, FC, and PMN-e are able to differentiate active IBD from inactive IBD as well as from IBS. |
FC: Fecal calprotectin, IBD:Inflammatory bowel disease, IBS: Irritable bowel syndrome, ESR: Erythrocyte sedimentation rate, CRP: C-reactive protein, UC: Ulcerative colitis, CD: Crohn disease, CAI: Clinical activity index, FL: Fecal lactoferrin, IC: Indetermined colitis.