Point of Care Significance 7/10

Faecal Calprotectin in IBD: Meta-Analyses Reveal Strengths and Assay Interchangeability Problems

This review synthesizes meta-analyses on faecal calprotectin (FCAL) in inflammatory bowel disease, confirming its value as a triage marker to avoid unnecessary endoscopy and as a surrogate for endoscopic disease activity. However, the authors flag a critical limitation: FCAL thresholds vary substantially between commercial assays due to poor concentration interchangeability, complicating clinical decision-making. The review also surveys alternative faecal biomarkers under development.

The original study

Faecal calprotectin in inflammatory bowel diseases: a review focused on meta-analyses and routine usage limitations.

Authors
Laserna-Mendieta EJ, Lucendo AJ
Journal
Clinical chemistry and laboratory medicine
Type
Journal Article, Meta-Analysis, Review
PMID
30785706
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Original abstract

A growing body of evidence has been published about the usefulness of measuring calprotectin in faecal samples (FCAL) in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) assessment, including diagnosis, monitoring of disease activity and relapse prediction. Several systematic reviews with meta-analyses compiling studies for each particular clinical setting have been carried out in recent years. Most of these were focused on the use of FCAL in IBD diagnosis and showed a relevant role for this marker in selecting patients with gastrointestinal symptoms who would not need a further examination by endoscopy. Although a lesser number of meta-analyses have been performed on the use of FCAL as a surrogate marker of disease activity, a close correlation between FCAL and endoscopic activity of IBD has been shown. With respect to the predictive capacity of FCAL for IBD relapse, a single meta-analysis published indicates that this role is more limited. Furthermore, FCAL thresholds vary considerably depending on the clinical setting and, what is more concerning, among different commercially available assays due to a lack of FCAL concentration interchangeability. Here, we summarise recent publications about the role and limitations of FCAL in IBD, with a special focus on meta-analyses, and give an overview of alternative faecal biomarkers.