For evaluation of Crohn's disease activity, based on endoscopic findings, more sensitive surrogate markers than is CDAI or CRP are fecal calprotectin and lactoferrin. These prove to be useful tools for estimation of disease activity in Crohn's disease.
SUMMARY
BackgroundFaecal calprotectin and lactoferrin increasingly serve as surrogate markers of disease activity in IBD. Data on the correlation of these markers with simple endoscopic score for Crohn's disease (SES-CD) and with histological findings are as yet limited.
Compared to pretreatment values, concentrations of fecal calprotectin and lactoferrin after the anti-TNF-alpha treatment were significantly lower. During anti-TNF-alpha therapy these fecal neutrophil-derived proteins may thus be useful surrogate markers for mucosal healing.
Our findings suggest that activation of the IL-23/IL-17 axis is fundamentally connected to the etiology of CD and may represent the basis for the relapsing nature of the disease by increasing the sensitivity of epithelium to microbial LPS.
The faecal neutrophil-derived proteins calprotectin and lactoferrin are reliable surrogate markers of mucosal improvement. Endoscopic responders achieved normalization of faecal biomarkers, whereas in the majority of endoscopic non-responders these markers remained abnormal.
Clinical scores commonly used in the assessment of disease activity are unreliable at differentiating endoscopic remission from active CD. Despite this, a score based on a combination of fecal calprotectin and the HBI is a new promising tool for identifying endoscopic remission.
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