Serum intestinal fatty acid–binding protein in the noninvasive diagnosis of celiac disease
Oldenburger, Irene B.; Wolters, Victorien M.; Kardol-Hoefnagel, Tineke; Houwen, Roderick H.J.; Otten, Henny G.
(2018) APMIS, volume 126, issue 3, pp. 186 - 190
(Article)
Abstract
Current diagnostic guidelines for celiac disease (CD) in pediatric patients require a duodenal biopsy if the IgA anti-tissue transglutaminase (tTG) is below 10x the upper limit of normal (ULN). Additional markers may enable a noninvasive diagnosis in this group. Serum intestinal-fatty acid-binding protein (I-FABP), a marker for intestinal epithelial damage,
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could be useful in this respect. A total of 95 children with a clinical suspicion of CD and tTG 1-10x ULN were investigated. All had a duodenal biopsy and analysis of serum I-FABP. A control group of 161 children with familial short stature and normal tTG was included. I-FABP levels in the 71 patients with tTG 1-10x ULN and biopsy-proven CD (median 725 pg/mL) were not significantly different (p = 0.13) from the levels in the 24 patients with a tTG 1-10x ULN but a normal biopsy (median 497 pg/mL). However, when combining tTG and I-FABP levels, 11/24 patients could have been diagnosed noninvasively if tTG is ≥ 50 U/mL and I-FABP ≥880 pg/mL or in 12/19 patients if tTG is ≥ 60 U/mL and I-FABP ≥ 620 pg/mL. Therefore, addition of I-FABP to the diagnostic procedure of CD may provide a noninvasive diagnosis in patients with a tTG ≥ 50 U/mL.
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Keywords: Celiac disease, I-FABP, noninvasive diagnosis, Immunoglobulin A/blood, Humans, GTP-Binding Proteins/immunology, Child, Preschool, HLA-DQ Antigens/blood, Infant, Male, Transglutaminases/immunology, Intestinal Mucosa/pathology, Celiac Disease/blood, Adolescent, Female, Duodenum/pathology, Child, Fatty Acid-Binding Proteins/blood, General Medicine, Journal Article
ISSN: 0903-4641
Publisher: Blackwell Munksgaard
Note: © 2018 APMIS. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
(Peer reviewed)