Costa MHM, Sassaki LY, Chebli JMF. Fecal calprotectin and endoscopic scores: The cornerstones in clinical practice for evaluating mucosal healing in inflammatory bowel disease. World J Gastroenterol 2024; 30(24): 3022-3035 [PMID: 38983953 DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v30.i24.3022]
Corresponding Author of This Article
Júlio Maria Fonseca Chebli, MD, PhD, Full Professor, Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Medicine, University Hospital of The Federal University of Juiz de Fora, University of Juiz de Fora School of Medicine, Rua Maria Jose Leal, 296, Juiz de Fora 36036-247, Minas Gerais, Brazil. julio.chebli@medicina.ufjf.br
Research Domain of This Article
Gastroenterology & Hepatology
Article-Type of This Article
Editorial
Open-Access Policy of This Article
This article is an open-access article which was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
World J Gastroenterol. Jun 28, 2024; 30(24): 3022-3035 Published online Jun 28, 2024. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v30.i24.3022
Table 1 Main indications for the use of fecal calprotectin and endoscopy in patients with inflammatory bowel disease
Fecal calprotectin
Endoscopy
Differential diagnosis of IBD and irritable bowel syndrome
Differential diagnosis with mimics
Monitoring therapeutic response
Evaluation of disease extension
Monitoring mucosal healing
Monitoring therapeutic response
Monitoring histological healing
Monitoring mucosal healing
Prediction of disease activity and postoperative recurrence
Monitoring histological healing
Prediction of disease activity and postoperative recurrence
Dysplasia surveillance
Treatment of some complications (e.g., strictures)
Table 2 Advantages and limitations of fecal calprotectin and endoscopy in patients with inflammatory bowel disease
Fecal calprotectin
Endoscopy
Advantages
Noninvasive
Direct evaluation of the mucosa
Low-cost, cost-effective
Gold standard method to evaluate the goal of IBD treatment (mucosal healing)
Easy collection and storage
Possibility of obtaining samples (biopsies)
Validated in UC and CD
Validated in IBD diagnostic, monitoring, and prediction of disease activity
Validated in both colonic and small bowel disease
Validated in adults and pediatric population
Validated in IBD diagnostic, monitoring, and prediction of disease activity
Validated scores for both UC and CD
Validated in adults and pediatric population
Distinguish patients with IBD from those with IBS
Limitations
Not specific for IBD
Invasive
Not differentiated UC from CD
Cost
No validated cutoff to define disease activity
Availability
Presence of a “gray zone” level between 100 and 250 μg/g, which is difficult to interpret
Inter-observer variability
Lower accuracy in detecting inflammatory activity in patients with CD of the small intestine or of the upper gastrointestinal tract compared to predominant or extensive colonic involvement
Variation depending on patient age, presence of obesity, and lifestyle
The presence of mucus and blood can interfere with FC result
High day-to-day variability
Despite the low cost, it is not available in some locations
Table 3 Endoscopic indices of ulcerative colitis activity with their strengths and limitations
Indices
Endoscopic technique
Validation
Strengths
Limitations
MES
WLE
No
The easiest to use
Subjectivity
Used in clinical trials and daily practice
Moderate reproducibility
Not appropriate description of inflammation and severity
Ambiguous definition of endoscopic remission
UCEIS
WLE
Yes
Easy to use
No thresholds for mild, moderate and severe disease
Good reproducibility and agreement
No definition of superficial or deep ulcer
High correlation with clinical, and histological indices and biomarkers
Clear definition or ER/MH
Clinically relevant outcomes
UCCIS
WLE
Yes
Good reproducibility and agreement
No definition of MH
Provides details about the status of inflammation of the entire colonic mucosa
No thresholds for mild, moderate and severe disease
Few evidence
PICaSSO
VCE-iSCAN
Yes
High reproducibility and agreement
Endoscopy experience and training required.
Strong accuracy discriminating quiescent from mild disease.
No long-term clinical outcome
Highest correlation with MH
Table 4 Practical pearls for the use of fecal calprotectin in Crohn’s disease
FC is a reliable test in distinguishing patients with IBD from those with IBS. A cutoff of ≤50 μg/g appears to have a better sensitivity and a negative predictive value of > 95% for IBD in Western countries[18]
FC should be measured before starting or optimizing any therapy for CD, at the end of the induction phase, every 2–4 mo in patients being treated for active disease, and every 6–12 mo during the maintenance therapy in those in symptomatic remission; and in case of clinical relapse of disease[14,20]
In patients with CD in symptomatic remission with confirmation of endoscopic remission within the last 3 years, an FC of < 150 µg/g can reliably rule out active inflammation and avoid routine endoscopic reassessment with relatively low false negatives[20]
Where there is a symptom-biomarker disconnect, or in patients with mild symptoms, an FC value of > 150 µg/g is insufficient to identify endoscopically active inflammation. In this context, endoscopic or radiologic assessment is necessary to truly define the presence of active disease before making empiric treatment adjustments[20]
In the presence of moderate to severe symptoms, an elevated FC strongly suggests endoscopically active disease and can be used to make decisions regarding most changes in therapy. However, normal FC is insufficient to dismiss inflammation, and endoscopic or radiologic assessment is important in this setting[20]
In small bowel CD, where only a short segment of involvement may exist, as well as in relatively proximal disease (upper gastrointestinal, stomach, and esophagus), the FC concentrations may not be elevated to that degree and produce false negatives[57]
Many times, FC is highly effective in detecting endoscopic ulcerations regardless of the CD location. A cutoff value of > 200 μg/g in patients with isolated ileal involvement and > 250 μg/g for ileocolonic or colonic disease may be the optimal threshold to detect endoscopic ulcerations[90]
Normalization of FC (e.g., < 250 μg/g) within 12 mo of starting therapy is associated with a reduced risk of CD progression[91]
In patients with CD in surgically induced remission within the past 12 mo at a low risk of postoperative recurrence, an FC value of < 50 μg/g reliably rules out postoperative recurrence. In patients at high risk (e.g., smokers, more than one intestinal resection, surgery due to penetrating disease, perianal disease, and long segments of small bowel resection), FC cannot be used to rule out or confirm endoscopic recurrence[20]
After ileocecal resection, an FC cutoff value of > 150 μg/g is likely to have the best overall accuracy in predicting postoperative endoscopic recurrence, with a sensitivity of approximately 70%[92]
FC concentration from an ileostomy effluent can be used for assessing and monitoring small bowel inflammation and disease recurrence. An FC level of > 60 μg/g is strongly suggestive of the presence of small bowel inflammation[93]
Table 5 Practical pearls to the use of fecal calprotectin in ulcerative colitis
FC should be measured before starting or optimizing any therapy for UC, at the end of induction therapy, every 2–4 mo in patients being treated for active disease, and every 6–12 mo during the maintenance therapy in patients in symptomatic remission; and in case of clinical relapse of disease[94]
FC values of < 150 μg/g typically reflect remission, FC values ranging from 150–250 μg/g are a grey zone, and cutoff values of > 200–300 μg/g suggest the presence of active disease[11]
Prior to symptoms based on the diagnosis of a flare, FC is reported to be elevated approximately 8 wk in advance. Conversely, patients who maintain remission usually present FC concentrations persistently < 60 μg/g[95]
FC is a reliable biomarker to evaluate the response to treatment. A post-induction FC concentration of ≤ 250 µg/g vs > 250 µg/g is associated with a substantially higher probability of achieving clinical, endoscopic, and histologic remission[46]
FC is a valuable marker of endoscopic inflammation, being useful in distinguishing Mayo endoscopic subscores of 0 from 1–3 using the FC cutoff of 60 μg/g[96]
Persistent high values of FC are an important predictor of disease flare in asymptomatic patients[94]
In patients with mild-to-moderate UC who achieve complete endoscopic healing, a FC cutoff value between 75 and 100 µg/g can be used to discriminate patients with ongoing microscopic inflammation from those with histologic remission[97]
In patients with ileal pouch-anal anastomosis, FC values of > 100 µg/g are suggestive of endoscopic or histological inflammation of the pouch (e.g., pouchitis)[57]
Citation: Costa MHM, Sassaki LY, Chebli JMF. Fecal calprotectin and endoscopic scores: The cornerstones in clinical practice for evaluating mucosal healing in inflammatory bowel disease. World J Gastroenterol 2024; 30(24): 3022-3035