In cystic fibrosis (CF), pancreatic insufficiency and a diminished bile acid pool cause malabsorption of important nutrients and dietary components leading to deficiency, poor nutritional status, and oxidative stress. Of particular significance is the malabsorption of fat-soluble nutrients and antioxidants, which are important for normal immune and neurologic function. Patients with CF often are deficient in these compounds despite supplementation with the current standard of care therapy. The objective was to compare the pharmacokinetic profile of this water-soluble vitamin E formulation (Aqua-E) with an oil-based softgel formulation in a malabsorbing patient population. Patients with CF who had documented malabsorption were recruited for participation in this pharmacokinetic study. Patients who met inclusion and exclusion criteria discontinued vitamin E supplementation, except for that in a multivitamin, for 7 to 21 days before the day of dosing. Patients were randomized to a single dose of 20 ml of Aqua-E or three oil-based softgels, which contained equivalent amounts of tocopherols. Blood was drawn from patients at time 0, 2, 4, 8, 24, 48, and 168 hr and analyzed for tocopherols. Eight patients were enrolled in the study and randomized to Aqua-E or softgels. The primary outcome, the absorption of gamma-tocopherol in Aqua-E (AUC=115 micro g/ml(*)hr), was significantly greater than that of oil-based softgels (AUC=25.3 micro g/ml(*)hr; P=0.013). Total-tocopherols (alpha+gamma+delta) in Aqua-E (AUC=294 micro g/ml(*)hr) showed a strong trend toward increased absorption compared with that of oil-based softgels (AUC=117 micro g/ml(*)hr; P=0.09). In conclusion, this novel, water-soluble formulation showed a marked and statistically significant increase in absorption of gamma-tocopherol in malabsorbing patients with CF compared with an oil-based formulation.
Background: Although IgA endomysial antibodies (EMA) and tissue transglutaminase (TG) are sensitive and specific serologic tests for the diagnosis of celiac disease, there is limited information on the association of the magnitude of antibody level with the severity of the histological abnormalities of the intestine. Purpose: To determine if EMA and TG titers correlate with the severity of histological changes in patients with celiac disease. Methods: We identified 148 children from our laboratory database that had EMA, TG and intestinal biopsies performed. IgA EMA was determined by indirect immunofluorescence with results expressed as a dilutional titer with positivity determined at 1:5. IgA TG was determined by an enzyme linked human immunosorbent ELISA assay with results expressed in standardized units. A modified Marsh histological grading system was used to describe the duodenal biopsies: Type 0 normal, I increased intraepithelial lymphocytes (IEL), II hyperplastic crypts, IIIa partial villus atrophy, IIIb subtotal villus atrophy, IIIc total villous atrophy. Results: Mean values for EMA (Table 1) and TG (Table 2) progressively increased with increasing Marsh score.
Conclusion:There was considerable variability in EMA and TG levels for each Marsh grade, so that an individual level could not be utilized to predict histological severity. The data show that as a group, increasing severity of the histological lesion in celiac disease was associated with increased levels of both IgA EMA and TG antibodies.
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