Literature DB >> 30452618

Faecal Calprotectin and Magnetic Resonance Enterography in Ileal Crohn's Disease: Correlations Between Disease Activity and Long-Term Follow-Up.

G R Jones1,2, F Fascì-Spurio1,3, N A Kennedy1,2, N Plevris1, P Jenkinson1, M Lyons1, L Wong4, P MacLean4, S Glancy4, C W Lees1,2.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Magnetic resonance enterography [MRE] is the gold standard for assessing ileal inflammation in Crohn's disease [CD]. The aim of the present study was to correlate faecal calprotectin [FC] to MRE via a simple score in an exclusive ileal cohort with long-term follow-up for association with time to surgery or biologic therapy.
METHODS: In total, 150 MRE studies with matched FC [±30 days] were identified from the Edinburgh FC Register [2008-12; n = 18138]. Scans were re-read blinded to clinical data, independently, by two expert gastrointestinal radiologists, to generate a simple MRE score [range 0-10] from assessment of the worst intestinal segment plus total disease extent.
RESULTS: In total, 119 MRE scans were evaluated from 104 patients with ileal CD [L1 or L3 with panproctocolectomy]. Receiver operating characteristic analysis showed an area under the curve of 0.77 [0.67-0.87, p < 0.0001] for FC and MRE score >1, with an optimal cut-off of 145 μg/g for severe inflammation on MRE with 69.3% [57.6-79.5] sensitivity and 71.4% [53.7-85.4] specificity. Long-term follow-up over a median [interquartile range] of 2086 days [1786-2353] revealed FC ≥ 145 μg/g was associated with reduced biologic-free survival until 3 years following MRE, whereas MRE score [severe vs absent] was associated with reduced surgery- and biologic-free survival throughout follow-up. Backwards stepwise logistic regression revealed that length of ileal disease (odds ratio [OR] 3.8, 1.1-13.2, p = 0.034) and increased bowel wall thickness at MRE [OR 4.2, 1.6-10.7, p < 0.0001] or female sex [OR 5.2, 1.5-18.7, p = 0.011] increased the risk of biologic use or surgery, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS: FC correlates well with MRE assessment of ileal CD with MRE parameters associated with long-term biologic- and surgery-free remission.
Copyright © 2018 European Crohn’s and Colitis Organisation (ECCO). Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Crohn’s disease; MRE; calprotectin; follow-up

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 30452618     DOI: 10.1093/ecco-jcc/jjy187

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Crohns Colitis        ISSN: 1873-9946            Impact factor:   9.071


  4 in total

1.  Correlation between imaging findings on outpatient MR enterography (MRE) in adult patients with Crohn disease and progression to surgery within 5 years.

Authors:  Bari Dane; Kun Qian; Rachel Krieger; Paul Smereka; Jonathan Foster; Chenchan Huang; Shannon Chang; Sooah Kim
Journal:  Abdom Radiol (NY)       Date:  2022-08-02

Review 2.  Results of the Seventh Scientific Workshop of ECCO: Precision Medicine in IBD-Disease Outcome and Response to Therapy.

Authors:  Bram Verstockt; Nurulamin M Noor; Urko M Marigorta; Polychronis Pavlidis; Parakkal Deepak; Ryan C Ungaro
Journal:  J Crohns Colitis       Date:  2021-09-25       Impact factor: 9.071

3.  Evaluation of a fluorescent immunochromatography test for fecal calprotectin.

Authors:  Runqing Li; Xiuying Zhao; Jingxiao Dong; Dong Zhu; Tengjiao Wang; Song Yang; Zhipeng Zhao; Nan Xiao
Journal:  J Clin Lab Anal       Date:  2019-10-06       Impact factor: 2.352

4.  Intestinal ultrasonography and fecal calprotectin for monitoring inflammation of ileal Crohn's disease: two complementary tests.

Authors:  José María Paredes; Tomás Ripollés; Ángela Algarra; Rafael Diaz; Nadia Moreno; Patricia Latorre; María Jesús Martínez; Pilar Llopis; Antonio López; Eduardo Moreno-Osset
Journal:  Intest Res       Date:  2022-03-15
  4 in total

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