Fecal Amino Acid Profiles Exceed Accuracy of Serum Amino Acids in Diagnosing Pediatric Inflammatory Bowel Disease

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Abstract

In this prospective intention-to-diagnose pilot study, we aimed to assess accuracy of serum and fecal amino-acids to discriminate de novo pediatric inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and non-IBD children. Patients with suspected IBD were allocated the IBD (n = 11) or non-IBD group (n = 8) following laboratory testing or endoscopy according to the revised Porto-criteria. Fecal calprotectin levels were obtained, an additional blood and fecal sample were collected. Fecal and serum amino-acid profiles were analyzed using high performance-liquid chromatography. Nine fecal amino-acids (alanine [area under the curve 0.94], citrulline [0.94], glutamine [0.89], leucine [0.98], lysine [0.89], phenylalanine [0.99], serine [0.91], tyrosine [0.96], and valine [0.95]) differed significantly between IBD and non-IBD. In serum, no significant differences were observed. This study underlines the potential of fecal amino-acids as novel, adjuvant noninvasive, and low-cost biomarkers in the diagnostic work-up of pediatric IBD detection.

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Bosch, S., El Manouni El Hassani, S., Brizzio Brentar, M., Ayada, I., Bakkali, A., Jansen, E. E. W., … De Meij, T. G. J. (2020). Fecal Amino Acid Profiles Exceed Accuracy of Serum Amino Acids in Diagnosing Pediatric Inflammatory Bowel Disease. Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition, 71(3), 371–375. https://doi.org/10.1097/MPG.0000000000002770

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