New insights into the biological and clinical significance of fecal calprotectin in inflammatory bowel disease

L Amati, ME Passeri, F Selicato… - …, 2006 - Taylor & Francis
L Amati, ME Passeri, F Selicato, ML Mastronardi, A Penna, E Jirillo, V Covelli
Immunopharmacology and immunotoxicology, 2006Taylor & Francis
Nowadays, calprotectin, a cytoplasmatic protein, released by activated neutrophilic
polymorphonuclear cells (PMN) and/or monocytes-macrophages (MØ), is considered a
good indicator of inflammation in several diseases. Accordingly, fecal calprotectin
represents a good predictor of clinical relapse in ulcerative colitis (UC) patients, whereas
conflicting results have been reported in Crohn's disease (CD) patients. In our study, in 76
IBD patients (29 CD and 47 UC) fecal calprotectin has been evaluated by a commercial …
Nowadays, calprotectin, a cytoplasmatic protein, released by activated neutrophilic polymorphonuclear cells (PMN) and/or monocytes-macrophages (MØ), is considered a good indicator of inflammation in several diseases. Accordingly, fecal calprotectin represents a good predictor of clinical relapse in ulcerative colitis (UC) patients, whereas conflicting results have been reported in Crohn's disease (CD) patients. In our study, in 76 IBD patients (29 CD and 47 UC) fecal calprotectin has been evaluated by a commercial ELISA kit. Results demonstrate that levels of this protein in the stool are significantly more elevated in active CD and UC patients than in normal volunteers. In quiescent CD and UC a trend to higher levels of calprotectin than in the normal counterpart is, however, evident. These data suggest that a low-grade inflammation of the intestinal wall is always present in CD and UC patients, which may predict a clinical relapse risk. In the same group of patients calprotectin levels also were analyzed according to sex and age. A trend to higher values of calprotectin was present in male patients with active or quiescent CD than in their female counterparts. Only in UC patients in remission a trend to calprotectin increase was more marked in the male group than in the female counterpart. When CD and UC patients were divided up according to age, calprotectin positivity peaked between 30–39 years in active CD patients, while in quiescent CD maximum positivity was between 40 and 49 years. However, in both active and quiescent UC patients, calprotectin positivity increased with age. The more precocious detectability of fecal calprotectin in CD patients, as a marker of intestinal mucosa inflammation, may be related to the different histopathology of the two diseases (CD versus UC). However, reduced PMN and/or MØ trafficking from peripheral blood to intestinal mucosa with age by effects of chronic treatment should not be ignored in CD patients.
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