• Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd · Nov 2003

    Review

    [Calprotectin: a fecal marker for diagnosis and follow-up in patients with chronic inflammatory bowel disease].

    • F A van den Bergh, J J Kolkman, M G Russel, R T Vlaskamp, and I Vermes.
    • Medisch Spectrum Twente, Postbus 50.000, 7500 KA Enschede. f.vandenbergh@ziekenhuis-mst.nl
    • Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd. 2003 Nov 29; 147 (48): 2360-5.

    AbstractChronic inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is characterised clinically by periods of well being interspersed by exacerbations of disease activity. Differentiation between IBD and less severe disorders such as irritable bowel syndrome requires invasive and expensive diagnostic procedures. Diagnostic differentiation between active disease, symptoms due to residual constriction of the fibrotic lumen and functional symptoms is a well-known problem. There are not yet any laboratory parameters with sufficient discrimination in terms of sensitivity and specificity. Colonoscopy and histopathological examination remain the gold standards: in Crohn's disease this may be complex due to the variable localisation of the inflammatory process. Abdominal scintigraphic procedures, although informative, are complex and expensive. The recent assessment of faecal calprotectin, a calcium- and zinc-binding anti-inflammatory protein found in neutrophilic granulocytes and monocytes, offers an attractive alternative as an index of intestinal inflammation. We measured this stable marker in random stool samples from 187 patients including healthy volunteers, patients with endoscopically classified active IBD or IBD in remission, and patients with other gastrointestinal disorders. Disease activity was monitored by clinical symptoms, blood tests and endoscopy. Our results confirm previous literature findings that faecal calprotectin is a promising and useful non-invasive tool in the screening of patients presenting with abdominal pain and diarrhoea. Moreover, calprotectin seems helpful in differentiating between active and non-active IBD and possibly also in the monitoring of disease activity.

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