1. Abdominal Symptoms Assessed With the CFAbd-Score are Associated With Intestinal Inflammation in Patients With Cystic Fibrosis
- Author
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Jaudszus, Anke, Pfeifer, Elena, Lorenz, Michael, Beiersdorf, Nathalie, Hipler, Uta Christina, Zagoya, Carlos, and Mainz, Jochen G.
- Abstract
This prospective study evaluated the relationship between fecal markers of intestinal inflammation and cystic fibrosis (CF)-associated abdominal symptoms. These were assessed using the CFAbd-Score, a CF-specific patient-related outcome measure developed and validated, following FDA guidelines. In feces from patients with CF (n = 41) and healthy volunteers (n = 27), concentrations of fecal calprotectin (FC), M2-pyruvate kinase (M2-PK), interleukins IL-1ß, IL-6, IL-8, and neutrophilic elastase (NE) were measured. Abdominal symptoms during the 2 preceding weeks were recorded using the CFAbd-Score. This patient-reported outcome measure (PROM) for assessment of the multi-organic abdominal involvement in CF includes 28 items in five domains. Inflammatory parameters FC, IL-1ß, M2-PK, and NE in feces, as well as CFAbd-Scores resulted significantly higher in CF patients than in healthy controls (all P< 0.01). Furthermore, significant differences between both groups were found for pain-symptoms, disorders of bowel movement, impaired quality of life, as well as disorders of eating and appetite. With 83% sensitivity and 74% specificity, FC was the most reliable measure for CF-related intestinal inflammation, which, in the CFAbd-Score, was associated to significantly higher rates of abdominal pain, as well as to general quality of life items such as gastrointestinal-related impaired sleep and frustration. Using the CFAbd-Score as a CF-specific PROM for identification and quantification of abdominal symptoms revealed that abdominal pain and impaired quality of life are associated with intestinal inflammation in CF.
- Published
- 2022
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