| Literature DB >> 35879875 |
Lena L Enderle1, Gabor Köller2, Romy M Heilmann1.
Abstract
The concentration of calprotectin in feces (fCal) is a clinically useful marker of chronic gastrointestinal inflammation in humans and dogs. No commercial assay is widely available to measure fCal in small animal medicine, to date. Thus, we verified the immunoturbidimetric fCAL turbo assay (Bühlmann) of fCal for canine and feline fecal extracts by determining linearity, spiking and recovery, and intra-assay and inter-assay variability. We determined RIs, temporal variation over 3 mo, and effect of vaccination and NSAID treatment. Observed:expected (O:E) ratios (x̄ ± SD) for serial dilutions of feces were 89-131% (106 ± 9%) in dogs and 77-122% (100 ± 12%) in cats. For spiking and recovery, the O:E ratios were 90-118% (102 ± 11%) in dogs and 83-235% (129 ± 42%) in cats. Intra- and inter-assay CVs for canine samples were ≤19% and ≤7%, and for feline samples ≤22% and ≤21%. Single-sample RIs were <41 μg/g for dogs and <64 μg/g for cats. With low reciprocal individuality indices, using population-based fCal RIs is appropriate, and moderate fCal changes between measurements (dogs 44.0%; cats: 43.2%) are considered relevant. Cats had significant (but unlikely relevant) fCal increases post-vaccination. Despite individual fCal spikes, no differences were seen during NSAID treatment. The fCAL turbidimetric assay is linear, precise, reproducible, and sufficiently accurate for measuring fCal in dogs and cats. Careful interpretation of fCal concentrations is warranted in both species during the peri-vaccination period and for some patients receiving NSAID treatment.Entities:
Keywords: S100A8/A9; calgranulin; calprotectin; canine; chronic inflammatory enteropathy; feline; inflammation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35879875 PMCID: PMC9446300 DOI: 10.1177/10406387221114031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Vet Diagn Invest ISSN: 1040-6387 Impact factor: 1.569
Summary of all 172 dogs and cats included in our study of fecal calprotectin.
| Study part |
| Age, y | Sex, female (spayed),
| Mixed/purebred (dogs),
| Breeds | Body weight, kg | Body condition score | Waltham feces score | fCal concentration, µg/g |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mixed/DSH/purebred (cats),
| |||||||||
| Analytical verification | |||||||||
| Dogs | 18 | 7 (0.3–12) | 10 (2)/8 (6) | 7/11 | American Staffordshire (2), German Shepherd dog (2), Cocker Spaniel (1), English Setter (1), Goldendoodle (1), Papillon (1), Parson Russel Terrier (1), Rottweiler (1), Whippet (1) | NA | NA | NA | 398 (10–5,320) |
| Cats | 22 | 10 (0.3–19) | 12 (10)/10 (9) | 2/15/5 | BSH (3), Maine Coon (1), Thai cat (1) | NA | NA | NA | 175 (22–7,040) |
| RI | |||||||||
| Dogs | 57 | 6 (1–14) | 26 (16)/31 (24) | 17/40 | Berger des Pyrenees (3), Chihuahua (3), Malinois (3), Airedale Terrier (2), Dalmatian (2), German Shepherd dog (2), JRT (2), YT (2), Appenzeller Mountain dog(1), Australian Shepherd dog (1), Bavarian Mountain Hound (1), Bernese Mountain dog (1), Bolonka (1), Border Terrier (1), Boxer (1), Coton de Tulear (1), Dachshund (1), Dandie Dinmont Terrier (1), Flat-Coated Retriever (1), Giant schnauzer (1), Greater Swiss Mountain dog (1), Labrador retriever (1), Maltipoo (1), Miniature Bull Terrier (1), Pinscher (1), Rhodesian Ridgeback (1), Shi Tzu (1), Spanish Waterdog (1), Weimaraner (1) | 21 (1.7–59.8) | 5 (4–9) | 2 (1.5–3) | 7 (0–42) |
| Cats | 48 | 6 (0.75–16) | 26 (23)/22 (22) | 6/37/5 | Abyssinian (1), BSH (1), Carthusian (1), Maine Coon (1), Siamese (1) | 4.2 (3.1–11) | 5 (3.5–8) | 2 (1–3) | 12 (0–64) |
| Temporal variability | |||||||||
| Dogs | 12 | 5.5 (1–13) | 4 (3)/8 (6) | 5/7 | German Shepherd dog (2), Australian Cattle dog (1), Dalmatian (1), Flat-Coated Retriever (1), Miniature Bull Terrier (1), Pinscher (1) | 21 (6–41) | 5 (4–7) | 2 (1–4) | 7 (0–322) |
| Cats | 10 | 6 (1–16) | 3 (2)/7 (7) | 1/7/2 | Siamese (1), Scottish Fold (1) | 4.2 (3.1–5) | 5 (4–6) | 2 (1–4.5) | 15 (0–345) |
| Effect of vaccination | |||||||||
| Dogs | 16 | 5 (1–9) | 7 (4)/9 (5) | 9/7 | Dalmatian (1), Eurasian (1), Flat-Coated Retriever (1), Greater Swiss Mountain dog (1), Miniature Bull Terrier (1), Pinscher (1), Standard Poodle (1) | 27 (6–49.5) | 5 (4–7) | 2 (1–3.5) | 6 (0–229) |
| Cats | 10 | 5 (0.8–9) | 4 (3)/6 (6) | 1/8/1 | Siamese (1) | 4.2 (3–5.4) | 5 (4–6) | 2 (1–4) | 7 (0–94) |
| Effect of NSAID administration | |||||||||
| Dogs | 14 | 3.3 (0.5–11) | 8 (5)/6 (3) | 6/8 | Briard (1), Dachshund (1), Dalmatian (1), Irish Setter (1), JRT (1), Maltipoo (1), Standard Poodle (1), YT (1) | 13.8 (3–49.5) | 4 (3.5–7) | 2 (1.5–3.5) | 2 (0–61) |
| Cats | 11 | 4 (0.6–8) | 6 (2)/5 (4) | 1/10/0 | NA | 4.1 (2.6–6) | 5 (3.5–6) | 2 (1–4.5) | 5 (0–452) |
Note that some patients were included in more than one part of the study but counted only once for the total number of animals investigated, rendering 40 animals included in the analytical verification and 132 animals in the preclinical verification.
BSH = British shorthair cat; DSH = domestic shorthair cat; JRT = Jack Russell Terrier; NA = not applicable or not available; YT = Yorkshire Terrier.
Median (range).
Figure 1.Dilutional linearity of the fCAL turbo assay for A. canine and B. feline fecal extracts. Observed and expected fCal concentrations for serially 2-fold diluted samples from A. 6 dogs and B. 6 cats were closely correlated, demonstrating linearity of the fCAL turbo assay for canine and feline specimens (for further detail, see Suppl. Table 1). Measured (observed, O) fCal concentrations are plotted on the x-axis, expected (E) concentrations are on the y-axis. Each symbol indicates a specific fecal extract, the bold gray line indicates perfect linearity (O:E ratio = 100%), and the thin broken gray lines indicate the acceptance criteria for assay linearity (lower line, O:E ratio = 80%; upper line, O:E ratio = 120% ).
Accuracy (spiking and recovery) of the fCAL turbo assay for canine and feline fecal extracts. The percentage observed:expected ratios (O:E) for the spiking and recovery of fCal for 20 spiked fecal extracts from dogs (C1–C20) and 25 spiked fecal extracts from cats (F1–F25).
| Dogs | Cats | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sample | O, µg/g | E, µg/g | Mix ratio, % | O:E, % | Sample | O, µg/g | E, µg/g | Mix ratio, % | O:E, % |
| C1 | 49 | 49 | 25:75 | 100 | F1 | 53 | 45 | 50:50 | 118 |
| C2 | 70 | 73 | 50:50 | 95 | F2 | 69 | 81 | 50:50 | 85 |
| C3 | 76 | 72 | 75:25 | 105 | F3 | 72 | 53 | 50:50 | 135 |
| C4 | 232 | 208 | 50:50 | 111 | F4 | 116 | 66 | 50:50 | 176 |
| C5 | 251 | 254 | 50:50 | 99 | F5 | 136 | 146 | 50:50 | 93 |
| C6 | 262 | 231 | 50:50 | 114 | F6 | 143 | 78 | 75:25 | 185 |
| C7 | 286 | 251 | 50:50 | 114 | F7 | 148 | 82 | 75:25 | 181 |
| C8 | 301 | 274 | 50:50 | 110 | F8 | 239 | 148 | 50:50 | 161 |
| C9 | 482 | 421 | 50:50 | 115 | F9 | 260 | 173 | 50:50 | 151 |
| C10 | 842 | 718 | 50:50 | 117 | F10 | 353 | 315 | 50:50 | 112 |
| C11 | 871 | 740 | 50:50 | 118 | F11 | 367 | 334 | 50:50 | 110 |
| C12 | 1,064 | 931 | 50:50 | 114 | F12 | 424 | 384 | 50:50 | 110 |
| C13 | 1,077 | 1,197 | 50:50 | 90 | F13 | 478 | 224 | 75:25 | 213 |
| C14 | 1,238 | 1,378 | 50:50 | 90 | F14 | 569 | 242 | 75:25 | 235 |
| C15 | 1,255 | 1,370 | 50:50 | 92 | F15 | 770 | 881 | 50:50 | 87 |
| C16 | 1,274 | 1,392 | 50:50 | 91 | F16 | 971 | 891 | 50:50 | 109 |
| C17 | 1,284 | 1,402 | 50:50 | 92 | F17 | 1,012 | 878 | 50:50 | 115 |
| C18 | 1,439 | 1,539 | 50:50 | 93 | F18 | 1,024 | 919 | 50:50 | 111 |
| C19 | 1,463 | 1,583 | 50:50 | 92 | F19 | 1,056 | 928 | 50:50 | 114 |
| C20 | 1,931 | 2,049 | 50:50 | 94 | F20 | 1,066 | 905 | 50:50 | 118 |
| F21 | 1,258 | 1,511 | 50:50 | 83 | |||||
| F23 | 1,340 | 1,520 | 50:50 | 88 | |||||
| F24 | 1,794 | 1,675 | 50:50 | 107 | |||||
| F25 | 2,823 | 2,876 | 50:50 | 98 | |||||
Precision of the fCAL turbo assay for canine and feline fecal extracts. The intra-assay CVs for 6 fecal extracts from dogs (C1–C6) and 6 fecal extracts from cats (F1–F6), each tested 10 times on the same assay run.
| Dogs | Cats | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sample | x̄, µg/g | SD | CV% | Sample | x̄, µg/g | SD | CV% |
| C1 | 75 | 7 | 9 | F1 | 57 | 11 | 19 |
| C2 | 98 | 7 | 7 | F2 | 60 | 13 | 22 |
| C3 | 355 | 13 | 4 | F3 | 206 | 9 | 4 |
| C4 | 697 | 8 | 1 | F4 | 402 | 70 | 18 |
| C5 | 2,022 | 21 | 1 | F5 | 1,656 | 57 | 3 |
| C6 | 5,132 | 953 | 19 | F6 | 6,895 | 51 | 1 |
Reproducibility of the fCAL turbo assay for canine and feline fecal extracts. The inter-assay CVs for 6 different fecal extracts from dogs (C1–C6) and 6 different fecal extracts from cats (F1–F6), each measured in 10 consecutive assay runs (over a total of 8.5 wk, using aliquots stored at −20°C).
| Dogs | Cats | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sample | x̄, µg/g | SD | CV% | Sample | x̄, µg/g | SD | CV% |
| C1 | 80 | 6 | 7 | F1 | 52 | 11 | 21 |
| C2 | 99 | 7 | 7 | F2 | 53 | 5 | 9 |
| C3 | 356 | 20 | 6 | F3 | 204 | 12 | 6 |
| C4 | 673 | 43 | 6 | F4 | 331 | 18 | 5 |
| C5 | 1,910 | 107 | 6 | F5 | 1,418 | 115 | 8 |
| C6 | 4,808 | 301 | 6 | F6 | 6,834 | 408 | 6 |
Figure 2.RIs for canine and feline fCal concentrations using the fCAL turbo assay. Scatter plots of fCal concentrations measured in the reference populations of A. 57 healthy dogs and B. 48 healthy cats. Each symbol represents the concentration of a specific dog or cat sample. Median fCal concentrations (solid horizontal lines) and RIs (gray shaded portion below the dashed horizontal line) were calculated.
Figure 3.Temporal variation over 3 mo of fCal concentrations in A. 12 healthy dogs and B. 10 healthy cats. The mean (circles) and range (horizontal bars) of fCal concentrations are shown for each dog or cat. The gray shaded areas (to the left of the dashed vertical lines) indicate the RIs; the overall mean fCal concentrations are shown by the dotted vertical lines (dogs: 9 μg/g; cats: 16 μg/g). Three dogs and 1 cat had at least 1 measurement above the respective upper reference limit (dogs: 41 μg/g; cat: 64 μg/g). Asterisks indicate outlying observations (level II outliers) removed from the dataset.
Figure 4.Peri-vaccination fCal concentrations in dogs and cats. A. No statistically significant differences in fCal concentrations were observed in 16 healthy pet dogs prior to vaccination (median: 7 µg/g; range: 3–52 µg/g) and 1 d (median: 8 µg/g; range: 3–229 µg/g), 3 d (median: 3 µg/g; range: 3–29 µg/g), and 7 d (median: 9 µg/g; range: 3–142 µg/g) post-vaccination (p = 0.220). B. In cats, peri-vaccination fCal concentrations differed significantly (p = 0.018). A significant increase in fCal concentrations was detected 7 d post-vaccination (median 18 µg/g; range: 3–50 µg/g) compared to pre-vaccination concentrations (median: 3 µg/g, range: 0–94 µg/g; p = 0.013) but no differences compared to days 1 (median: 4 µg/g; range: 3–40 µg/g) or 3 (median: 8 µg/g, range: 3–17 µg/g; both p > 0.05) after vaccination. Each symbol represents the fCal concentration for a specific dog or cat and time. RIs are indicated by the gray shaded portions below the dashed horizontal lines.
Figure 5.Serial fCal concentrations in NSAID-treated dogs and cats. A. No statistically significant changes in fCal concentrations were detected in 14 canine patients during (post 1st; median: 4 µg/g, range: 3–23 µg/g) or after (post 2nd; median: 1 µg/g, range: 3–21 µg/g) NSAID treatment compared to pretreatment fCal concentrations (median: 3 µg/g, range: 3–61 µg/g; p = 0.337). B. In cats, no significant changes in fCal concentrations were detected during (post 1st; median: 5 µg/g, range: 0–452 µg/g) or after (post 2nd; median: 3 µg/g, range: 0–261 µg/g) NSAID treatment compared to pretreatment fCal concentrations (median: 6 µg/g, range: 3–26 µg/g; p = 0.483), but a marked increase in fCal concentrations during (452 μg/g) and after (261 μg/g) NSAID treatment was seen in 1 cat. Each symbol represents the fCal concentration for a specific dog or cat and time. RIs are indicated by the gray shaded portions below the dashed horizontal lines.