Article Text
Abstract
Background and aims: The clinical course of inflammatory bowel disease is characterised by a succession of relapses and remissions. The aim of our study was to assess whether the predictive value of faecal calprotectin—a non-invasive marker of intestinal inflammation—for clinical relapse is different in ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn’s disease (CD).
Methods: Seventy nine consecutive patients with a diagnosis of clinically quiescent inflammatory bowel disease (38 CD and 41 UC) were followed for 12 months, undergoing regular clinical evaluations and blood tests. A single stool sample was collected at the beginning of the study from each patient and the calprotectin concentration was assessed by a commercially available enzyme linked immunoassay.
Results: In CD, median calprotectin values were 220.1 μg/g (95% confidence interval (CI) 21.7–418.5) in those patients who relapsed during follow up, and 220.5 μg/g (95% CI 53–388) in non-relapsing patients (p = 0.395). In UC, median calprotectin values were 220.6 μg/g (95% CI 86–355.2) and 67 μg/g (95% CI 15–119) in relapsing and non-relapsing patients, respectively (p<0.0001). The multivariate Cox (proportional hazard) regression model, after adjustment for possible confounding variables, showed a twofold and 14-fold increase in the relapse risk, respectively, in those patients with CD and UC in clinical remission who had a faecal calprotectin concentration higher than 150 μg/g.
Conclusions: Faecal calprotectin proved to be an even stronger predictor of clinical relapse in UC than in CD, which makes the test a promising non-invasive tool for monitoring and optimising therapy.
- CRP, C reactive protein
- CD, Crohn’s disease
- CDAI, Crohn’s disease activity index
- ESR, erythrocyte sedimentation rate
- IBD, inflammatory bowel disease
- NPV, negative predictive value
- PPV, positive predictive value
- ROC, receiver operating characteristic
- UC, ulcerative colitis
- UCAI, ulcerative colitis activity index
- calprotectin
- ulcerative colitis
- Crohn’s disease
- inflammatory bowel disease
- intestinal inflammation
Statistics from Altmetric.com
- CRP, C reactive protein
- CD, Crohn’s disease
- CDAI, Crohn’s disease activity index
- ESR, erythrocyte sedimentation rate
- IBD, inflammatory bowel disease
- NPV, negative predictive value
- PPV, positive predictive value
- ROC, receiver operating characteristic
- UC, ulcerative colitis
- UCAI, ulcerative colitis activity index
Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) are chronic intestinal disorders of unknown aetiology and with a typically relapsing course. The main goal of treatment in IBD is effective and lasting suppression of the inflammatory response in order to induce and maintain clinical remission. None the less, even in cases of successful treatment, subclinical inflammation of the intestinal wall may persist, contributing significantly to the risk of relapses.1
Assessment of intestinal inflammation remains a difficult challenge. Currently, the most reliable method requires endoscopy with biopsy sampling, which is an invasive diagnostic tool; furthermore, in the case of Crohn’s disease (CD), the site of the lesion cannot always be reached by endoscopy. The most widely used laboratory parameters of inflammation, such as the erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) and C reactive protein (CRP), are not sufficiently specific or sensitive. Clinical indices of disease activity, such as the Crohn’s disease activity index (CDAI), the ulcerative colitis activity index (UCAI), and the Harvey-Bradshaw activity index reflect the patient’s well being and quality of life rather than the degree of mucosal inflammation.2–5
Faecal calprotectin, an important granulocyte cytosolic protein, is closely correlated with faecal excretion of 111indium labelled leucocytes, deemed to be the gold standard for measuring intestinal inflammation.6,7 Assessment of faecal calprotectin levels has been proposed as a non-invasive test for the direct evaluation of intestinal inflammation in patients with IBD.8–10 Recently Tibble et al suggested that a high faecal calprotectin concentration may identify those IBD patients in remission who are at risk of early relapse, with no difference between ulcerative colitis (UC) and CD.11 On the other hand, a number of studies have shown that the predictive value of residual inflammation after drug induced clinical remission for relapses may be different in UC and CD.1,12
The aim of this study was to examine the role of intestinal inflammation in relapsing IBD using the surrogate marker of faecal calprotectin and to determine whether this marker has a different predictive value in UC and CD.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Patients
We followed 79 consecutive IBD outpatients (38 with CD and 41 with UC) diagnosed on the basis of standard clinical, endoscopic, radiological, and histological criteria. All patients had been in clinical remission for 1–12 months (mean 5). Remission was determined by a disease activity assessment based on the CDAI13 for patients with CD and UCAI14 for patients with UC. Clinical features of the two patient groups are shown in table 1.
Patients who had experienced a clinical relapse within the last month or who were suffering from chronic active disease requiring treatment with steroids were excluded. None of the study subjects had taken non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and/or antibiotics during the three months preceding their enrolment. Further exclusion criteria included: concomitant serious illnesses, pregnancy, or alcohol abuse. All patients were followed for 12 months, with clinical evaluation performed every three months or whenever a relapse occurred, including evaluation of CDAI or UCAI and routine blood tests. Clinical relapse was defined as the occurrence or worsening of symptoms, accompanied by an increase in the CDAI score to >150 or in the UCAI score to >4, sufficient to require a change in therapy (addition of steroids, immunosuppressors, surgery, etc). Each patient was invited to provide a single stool sample collected within 12 hours from delivery using a disposable plastic container.
All patients gave written informed consent before enrolment in the study.
Laboratory parameters
ESR (first hour) and CRP were assessed by standard methods (normal value ESR <12 mm/h; normal value CRP <5 mg/l).
Faecal calprotectin measurement
Faecal calprotectin was measured on frozen (−20°C) stool specimens using a commercially available quantitative enzyme linked immunoassay (Calprest; Eurospital, Trieste, Italy), as previously described.9
Statistical analysis
The series of 79 IBD patients was divided into two groups based on diagnosis: 38 with CD and 41 with UC. Patient characteristics were compared between the two groups using the Wilcoxon rank sum test for continuous variables and the exact test for categorical variables.
A dichotomous variable was assigned to each patient—that is, a value of 1 if the calprotectin level was >150 μg/g and a value of 0 if calprotectin was ⩽150 μg/g. The cut off level of 150 μg/g represented the point at which the area under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve for predicting the relapse rate in both CD and UC patients was maximal.
Incidence rates were obtained for the UC and CD groups. In addition, each group was subdivided into patients with calprotectin levels above and below 150 μg/g, Kaplan-Meier curves were obtained, and differences were tested using Mantel-Henzel log rank tests.
Univariate analysis was performed to determine the hazard ratios associated with each of the demographic and clinical parameters: sex, age at disease onset, previous quiescent phase, clinical index at the beginning of the study, smoking habits, extent of disease, medical therapy, and previous surgery.
Multivariate models were also constructed for the two patient groups as follows: all of the variables that in the univariate analysis showed an association with time to relapse were entered into multiple proportional hazard (Cox) regression models. Variables were then dropped from the model if they appeared to be non-significant by the Wald test (p value less than 10%). As each variable was eliminated, the coefficient associated with the dichotomous variable for calprotectin above or below 150 μg/g was checked. If its estimate changed by more than 10%, the dropped variable was reintroduced into the model as a potential confounder. The dichotomous variable for calprotectin above/below 150 μg/g was always retained in the models. Pairwise interactions were also tested, and were not introduced because they were never found to be significant. All p values reported for the univariate and multivariate models were based on likelihood ratio tests.
RESULTS
The 79 patients were followed for up to one year. Table 2 shows data on the disease course for the two patient groups, which consisted of a similar number of patients, yielding a roughly equivalent number of person months. The incidence of relapses was slightly higher among UC patients, although the difference was not significant.
Laboratory parameters
In the CD group, median baseline ESR and CRP values were 15 mm/h (95% confidence interval (CI) 5.2–24.8) and 6 mg/l (95% CI 2.5–9.5), respectively, in non-relapsing patients and 20 mm/h (95% CI 13.1–26.9) and 8 mg/l (95% CI 5.6–10.4) in patients who relapsed during the follow up period. This difference was not statistically significant (p = 0.077 for ESR and p = 0.373 for CRP).
Similarly, in UC patients, neither ESR nor CRP differed significantly between the relapsing and non-relapsing groups (p = 0.056 for ESR and p = 0.45 for CRP); in particular, baseline ESR and CRP values were 11 mm/h (95% CI 8.8–13.2) and 4.5 mg/l (95% CI 3.7–5.3) in the non-relapsing group and 15 mm/h (95% CI 10.9–19.1) and 5 mg/l (95% CI 0.9–9.1) in the relapsing group, respectively.
ROC curves for ESR and CRP did not identify any differences between the relapse and non-relapse groups for both CD and UC. Because of the lack of significance for the ROC curves, Kaplan-Meier plots of time to relapse were constructed using normal ranges as cut off values. A significant difference was found only for ESR in CD patients (p = 0.022).
Faecal calprotectin values
Median faecal calprotectin concentration was 220.3 μg/g (95% CI 92.2–348.4) in CD patients and 150.7 μg/g (95% CI 70–231.4) in UC patients. Median calprotectin value in those CD patients who relapsed during follow up was 220.1 μg/g (95% CI 21.7–418.5) compared with 220.5 μg/g (95% CI 53–388) in non-relapsing patients (p = 0.395). Median calprotectin values in relapsing and non-relapsing UC patients were 220.6 μg/g (95% CI 86–355.2) and 67 μg/g (95% CI 15–119), respectively (p<0.0001). No statistically significant difference in faecal calprotectin concentration was found among those who relapsed before six months and those who relapsed after six months in either patient group (p = 0.792 for CD and p = 0.422 for UC). ROC curves for faecal calprotectin as a predictor of relapse in IBD are shown in fig 1A and 1B. A statistically significant difference between CD and UC was found (p<0.0001).
A faecal calprotectin concentration of 150 μg/g gave a sensitivity of 89%, a specificity of 82%, a positive predictive value (PPV) of 81%, and a negative predictive value (NPV) of 90% in predicting relapse in UC patients; in the CD group, sensitivity, specificity, PPV, and NPV were 87%, 43%, 50%, and 83%, respectively.
Figure 2 (A, B) shows Kaplan-Meier time to relapse survivor curves according to patients’ faecal calprotectin levels by patient group. A calprotectin level greater than 150 μg/g was an important predictor of relapse for both UC (p<0.0001) and CD (p<0.05), although it was far stronger for UC. Among those patients with a calprotectin level greater than 150 μg/g, half of the CD patients and more than 80% of the UC patients had relapsed by the end of the study (p = 0.036).
Hazard ratios and 95% CI associated with the dichotomous and continuous variables are presented in table 3.
As shown in fig 2, those patients with higher levels of calprotectin were at higher risk of relapse; this risk was fourfold greater in CD and 12-fold greater in UC patients. Males and non-smokers were at lower risk in both diagnostic groups. Compared with smokers and non-smokers, ex smokers comprised patients at highest risk in both the CD and UC groups. Age and time to remission did not appear to influence the risk of relapse in the sampled patients. Estimated coefficients and 95% CI of the multivariate Cox (proportional hazard) regression models are reported in table 4 for the two patient groups. As very few CD patients and no UC patient underwent surgery, this variable was not included in the multivariate analysis. Similarly, we did not include a variable for therapy because most patients were on the same treatment (mesalazine).
In both models three variables appeared to be significant predictors of the risk of relapse: high levels of calprotectin, CDAI or UCAI score, and smoking habits. Among these, calprotectin level was by far the most important, especially among UC patients. After adjusting for the remaining variables, high calprotectin values showed a twofold and 14-fold increase in the risk of relapse in CD and UC patients, respectively.
Cox regression models exploring possible interactions among ESR, CRP, and calprotectin did not show any additional predictive role for ESR and CRP if combined with calprotectin.
DISCUSSION
Our 12 month follow up study demonstrated that in patients with quiescent IBD, especially UC, faecal calprotectin concentration was a strong predictor of clinical relapse. The chosen cut off level of 150 μg/g was three times the upper limit of normal and gave the highest combined sensitivity and specificity as a predictor of relapse in IBD overall, as well as in UC and CD separately. Laboratory parameters (ESR, CRP) did not prove to be useful predictors of clinical relapse in IBD as a whole. Using Kaplan-Meier plots of time to relapse, we found a significant difference only for ESR in CD patients; however, possible combinations for calprotectin, ESR, and CRP in Cox regression models did not improve the predictive value of calprotectin alone.
In this study, we found that among IBD patients in clinical remission with a high faecal calprotectin level (>150 μg/g), 50% of CD patients maintained remission during the follow up period compared with 19% of those with UC. As Crohn’s colitis seems to have a more aggressive course, we may speculate that in our consecutive CD patients the low percentage of colonic disease could partially explain this discrepancy.
Thus while in UC we observed a clearcut difference in calprotectin levels between relapsing and non-relapsing patients, in the CD group high faecal calprotectin values were not necessarily a predictor of relapse. Furthermore, on multivariate analysis we found that some parameters (CDAI at inclusion, smoking habits) acted as potential confounders in predicting clinical relapse in the CD group, where the hazard ratio dropped from 4 to 2.2, while in UC this value increased from 12.8 to 14.4. Our data therefore only partially confirm the recent findings of Tibble et al in the only other study on this topic11; they reported that calprotectin was an equally reliable predictor of relapse in UC and CD. Although a longer follow up on a larger series of IBD patients is needed, our findings deserve some discussion.
In IBD, the faecal calprotectin concentration appears to be a reliable parameter of mucosal inflammation although a correlation has been demonstrated with endoscopic and histological grading of disease activity only in UC.8
In this context, the different sensitivity of calprotectin in predicting relapse in UC and CD could reflect differences in the inflammatory pattern of these two diseases after drug induced clinical remission. In UC, 70% endoscopic and 50% histological healing post treatment has been reported and the presence of an acute (but not chronic) inflammatory infiltrate seems to be positively correlated with the relapse rate.1,12 This is in contrast with CD features; as shown in a large French, multicentre, prospective study, steroid induced clinical remission is associated with complete endoscopic healing (“no lesions or only healed lesions”) in only 13% of cases.3 Therefore, most CD patients, although they may appear clinically well, still have endoscopic lesions and significant intestinal inflammation. In addition, once clinical remission was achieved with steroid treatment, no difference was found in the relapse rate during an 18 month follow up period between endoscopically healed CD patients and those with persistent mucosal lesions.15 This is consistent with our findings of high faecal calprotectin levels in CD (but not UC) patients who were in long term clinical remission. In most of the cross sectional studies conducted thus far, CD patients showed high faecal calprotectin levels; normal concentrations were found only in those who had undergone surgery and exhibited no endoscopic signs of recurrence.7 Interestingly, preliminary data from Roseth suggested that in CD patients treated with infliximab, faecal calprotectin levels normalise in parallel with endoscopic healing.16
Taken together, this evidence suggests that faecal calprotectin, which reflects the inflammatory status of the intestinal mucosa, is an even stronger predictor of relapse in UC than in CD, where intestinal inflammation is not always a harbinger of clinical symptoms. Conversely in UC, incomplete resolution of the inflammatory infiltrate during clinical remission seems to be responsible for eventual relapses.
It could be argued that in CD, evaluation of remissions and relapses are usually based on the CDAI value, which represents a subjective and indirect assessment of gut inflammatory activity because it includes certain variables and symptoms not directly correlated with active inflammation and expression of severity rather than activity of disease. Moreover Saverymuttu reported that 89% of CD patients in clinical remission (CDAI <150) show greater faecal 111In granulocyte excretion than patients with irritable bowel syndrome, and concluded that CDAI underestimates gut inflammation.17
It is possible that stratification of patients on the basis of their disease pattern (inflammatory, stricturing, penetrating) could overcome some of these problems; although still speculative, it is reasonable to hypothesise that the inflammatory subgroup of CD (B1 according to the Vienna classification) would have the best correlation with a direct marker of acute gut inflammation, such as calprotectin.
We conclude that the significant correlation between faecal calprotectin concentration and the relapse rate in UC makes the faecal calprotectin assay a potentially useful non-invasive tool for monitoring and adjustment of treatment. If these data are confirmed, we speculate that acute phase therapy could be tapered once the faecal calprotectin concentration drops below 150 μg/g. Moreover, our results confirm that a subgroup of UC patients seems to be at high risk of developing colitis relapse; it should be highlighted that, as previously suggested by Riley and colleagues1 and subsequently by Tibble and Bjarnason,18 patients with UC in clinical remission should be stratified according to their level of intestinal inflammation when maintenance drug trials are planned.
REFERENCES
Footnotes
-
Conflict of interest: None declared.