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Faecal calprotectin testing for identifying patients with organic gastrointestinal disease: systematic review and meta‐analysis

Yoon‐Kyo An, David Prince, Fergus Gardiner, Teresa Neeman, Ecushla C Linedale, Jane M Andrews, Susan Connor and Jakob Begun
Med J Aust 2019; 211 (10): 461-467. || doi: 10.5694/mja2.50384
Published online: 18 November 2019

Abstract

Objectives: To assess the clinical effectiveness of faecal calprotectin (FC) testing for distinguishing between organic gastrointestinal diseases (organic GID), such as inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), and functional gastrointestinal disorders (functional GIDs).

Study design: Studies that assessed the accuracy of FC testing for differentiating between IBD or organic GID and functional GIDs were reviewed. Articles published in English during January 1998 – June 2018 that compared diagnostic FC testing in primary care and outpatient hospital settings with a reference test and employed the standard enzyme‐linked immunosorbent FC assay method with a cut‐off of 50 or 100 μg/g faeces were included. Study quality was assessed with QUADAS‐2, an evidence‐based quality assessment tool for diagnostic accuracy studies.

Data sources: MEDLINE and EMBASE; reference lists of screened articles.

Data synthesis: Eighteen relevant studies were identified. For distinguishing patients with organic GID (including IBD) from those with functional GIDs (16 studies), the estimated sensitivity of FC testing was 81% (95% CI, 74–86%), the specificity 81% (95% CI, 71–88%); area under the curve (AUC) was 0.87. For distinguishing IBD from functional GIDs (ten studies), sensitivity was 88% (95% CI, 80–93%), specificity 72% (95% CI, 59–82%), and AUC 0.89. Assuming a population prevalence of organic GID of 1%, the positive predictive value was 4.2%, the negative predictive value 100%. The difference in sensitivity and specificity between FC testing cut‐offs of 50 μg/g and 100 μg/g faeces was not statistically significant (P = 0.77).

Conclusions: FC testing is clinically useful for distinguishing organic GID (including IBD) from functional GIDs, and its incorporation into clinical practice for evaluating patients with lower gastrointestinal symptoms could lead to fewer patients with functional GIDs undergoing colonoscopy, reducing costs for both patients and the health system.

PROSPERO registration: CRD4201810507.

Gastrointestinal symptoms are the reason for 5–10% of primary care consultations, and not all patients need to be referred to specialist care.1,2 Confidently distinguishing on the basis of symptoms alone between patients with functional gastrointestinal disorders (functional GIDs) and those with organic gastrointestinal diseases (organic GIDs), such as inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), colorectal cancer, larger polyps (> 1 cm), and diverticulitis, can be difficult for both general practitioners and specialists.

Functional GIDs are chronic, idiopathic disorders, and their typical symptoms include abdominal pain, diarrhoea, bloating, constipation, and alternating bowel habits. But patients with organic GID can present with similar symptoms. Functional GIDs are much more frequent than organic GIDs; the most common functional GID, irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), affects about 10–20% of the population, with onset between 20 and 40 years of age.3,4 Once a functional GID has been diagnosed, further diagnostic tests are not required and patients can be managed in primary care.5 In contrast, several organic GIDs result in inflammation of the colon, and patients with these conditions are best assessed by specialists, often with colonoscopy or cross‐sectional imaging. In young adults (20–40 years of age) the most common organic GID is IBD (including ulcerative colitis and Crohn disease), which affects 0.4% of people under 50 years of age.6

In young adults, faecal calprotectin (FC) is often assessed to distinguish between IBS and IBD, but this approach is not usually recommended as the sole screening tool for people over 50 because of their higher risk of organic GID, including neoplasms.7,8,9,10,11,12 The high prevalence of IBS and low incidence of organic GID in people over 50 have led to suggestions that diagnosing functional GIDs in people over 50 should be based on their medical history, and that the number of investigations, including FC testing, should be kept to a minimum.7,8,9,10,11,12 Despite recommendations that functional GIDs be diagnosed and managed in primary care, large numbers of patients with probable functional GIDs are unnecessarily referred for further assessment, including colonoscopy.13,14,15

Inflammation is the key characteristic that distinguishes organic from functional GIDs. FC assessment is a non‐invasive predictive test with high sensitivity for detecting organic GID (including IBD) and high specificity for diagnosing IBD.16,17 Further, FC is superior to other biomarkers, such as C‐reactive protein and erythrocyte sedimentation rate, in that it localises inflammation to the bowel.16 Nevertheless, few comprehensive evaluations of the clinical effectiveness of FC testing have been published.

We reviewed the clinical effectiveness of FC testing for distinguishing organic GID from functional GIDs compared with specialist diagnoses based on combinations of clinical, laboratory, imaging, and endoscopic findings. We assessed both its effectiveness for distinguishing between patients with organic GIDs who require further investigation and patients with functional GIDs, and for distinguishing between patients with IBD and those with functional GIDs, a common clinical problem.

Methods

Our study was conducted in accordance with the Preferred Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta‐analysis [PRISMA] guidelines.18 Our systematic review was registered with the International prospective register of systematic reviews (PROSPERO) on 17 August 2018 (reference, CRD42018105078).

Search strategy

We searched MEDLINE and EMBASE for reports on the clinical effectiveness of FC testing for distinguishing organic GID (including IBD) or IBD specifically from functional GIDs published in English during January 1980 – June 2018. The following key words were used alone or in combination: “Crohn disease”, “ulcerative colitis”, “inflammatory bowel disease”, “irritable colon”, “digestive system function disorder”, “IBS”, “IBD”, “faecal or fecal”, “calprotectin”, “general practitioner”, “GP”, “primary care provider”, and “primary medical care”. In addition, we examined the references of screened articles to identify additional studies.

Study selection

The titles, abstracts, and study types of retrieved studies were assessed by two of the authors (SC, JB) for eligibility for full text review by two other authors (YA, DP). The study inclusion criteria were:

  • FC was examined as a diagnostic marker in either primary care or outpatient hospital settings;
  • FC testing was compared with a reference test or standard, such as colonoscopy or cross‐sectional imaging;
  • the patients (adults or children) presented with lower gastrointestinal symptoms;
  • FC was assessed with the standard enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) method, with pathology cut‐off values of 50 or 100 μg/g faeces;
  • the article was in English;
  • full text was available (ie, no abstracts).

We excluded studies that included patients with red flag signs or symptoms, such as positive faecal occult blood test, overt rectal bleeding, iron deficiency anaemia, abdominal or rectal masses, or a family history of bowel cancer that would require endoscopic evaluation.

Data extraction

Information was extracted on study design and aim, number of patients, patient demographic characteristics, study setting, inclusion and exclusion criteria, and reference test and index values. The following information was also collected: FC assays employed and cut‐off values applied; numbers of true and false positive and true and false negative test results; sensitivity and specificity; positive and negative predictive values; accuracy compared with reference test.

Quality assessment

All included studies were graded for methodological quality by two authors (YA, DP) with the revised tool for the Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies (QUADAS‐2).19 QUADAS‐2 assesses the quality of diagnostic accuracy studies in four domains: patient selection, index test, reference standard, and flow and timing. Each domain is assessed in terms of the risk of bias and (for the first three domains) the applicability of the study results. A study was graded as high quality when there was low risk of bias in at least six of the seven subdomains, and as low quality when there was high risk or unclear risk in four or more subdomains; all other studies were graded as moderate quality. Any disagreements were resolved by discussion with a third reviewer and majority consensus.

Statistical analysis and data synthesis

In our meta‐analysis we followed the guidance of the Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Diagnostic Test Accuracy.20 Our initial aim was to assess the effectiveness of FC testing for distinguishing between IBD and functional GIDs in patients with lower gastrointestinal symptoms. As the number of publications reporting this outcome was insufficient for a meta‐analysis, and studies examining its usefulness for distinguishing between organic GID (including IBD) and functional GIDs were more frequently reported, we added this second testing aim to our meta‐analysis.

We also conducted two unplanned analyses: first, we assessed the effectiveness of FC for distinguishing between people with organic GID or IBD and people with functional GIDs (as patients with possible organic GID or IBD require further investigation by a specialist, usually a colonoscopy, to confirm the diagnosis, it is useful to consider the two groups together); second, we assessed the effect of the choice of FC testing cut‐off value (50 or 100 μg/g) on accuracy in distinguishing between organic and functional GIDs.

The results of diagnostic two‐by‐two table analysis and diagnostic performance measures are reported for each research question. Forest plots (with 95% confidence intervals [CIs]) depict sensitivity and specificity by report. When studies applied both 50 and 100 μg/g cut‐off values to the same patient, we used the 50 μg/g value for our analysis. When a study included results for an individual patient in several comparisons, we analysed only the results associated with FC testing for distinguishing organic from functional GIDs; that is, we included an individual patient's results only once per indication.

We conducted two secondary analyses. First, we calculated the diagnostic odds ratio for each study, a measure of test effectiveness incorporating both sensitivity and specificity that is defined as the ratio of the odds of a test being positive if the patient has a condition and the odds of the test being positive if they do not have the disease; a higher ratio indicates greater accuracy. The diagnostic odds ratio can summarise overall test accuracy when prevalence differ between studies.21 Diagnostic odds ratios were summarised across studies using the random effects model approach of DerSimonian and Laird.22

Second, we applied the method of Reitsma and colleagues23 to generate summary receiver operating characteristic (sROC) curves (sensitivity v false positive rate). The sROC summarises overall test accuracy (the ratio of true positives to false positives), based on all relevant studies and FC cut‐offs (50, 100 μg/g). We present sROC curves for each research question, together with point estimates of the true positive and false positive rates for each study. Summary estimates of sensitivity and specificity (with 95% CIs) were calculated in bivariate analyses according to the approach of Reitsma and colleagues.23 Positive and negative predictive values were calculated from the overall sensitivity and specificity estimates for estimated prevalence rates of 0.1% and 1%.

All analyses were performed in R 3.5.1 (R Foundation for Statistical Computing) with the package mada (version 0.5.8; https://rdrr.io/rforge/mada).

Results

Study selection

The titles and abstracts of 115 publications (after removal of duplicates) were screened: 93 publications identified by the database search and 22 in reference lists. Thirty potentially eligible studies were selected for full text review: ten had examined the effectiveness of FC testing for distinguishing IBD from functional GIDs, and 18 publications reported on its effectiveness for distinguishing organic from functional GIDs (Box 1).

Grading of study quality (QUADAS‐2)

Study quality was high for eleven studies, moderate for four, and low for three studies. Concerns regarding the subdomains of patient selection and reference standard were the most frequent; in twelve studies, patient selection did not reflect a genuine primary care population, while in others34,35,41 the reference standard test that confirmed the final diagnosis was not clear (Box 2, Box 3).

Study characteristics

Sixteen studies employed prospective and two studies retrospective designs. Seven studies were conducted in primary care and eleven studies in secondary care settings (outpatient clinics or endoscopy units). Sixteen studies were performed in Europe in adult populations (mean age: range, 30–63 years); two European studies also assessed children (mean ages, 3.5 and 7 years) (Box 3). In all studies, patients presented with chronic lower gastrointestinal symptoms suggesting either organic GID (particularly IBD) or a functional GID. Colonoscopy was the reference standard in most studies. The most frequently used ELISA kit was the EK‐CAL kit (Bühlmann Laboratories), employed in eight studies. The cost‐effectiveness of FC testing was evaluated in two studies.40,41

Of the 18 eligible studies, ten examined FC testing for differentiating IBD from functional GIDs, sixteen for diagnosing organic GID (organic GID v functional GID), and seven considered both (organic GID or IBD v functional GID). As one study included separate adult and child groups, there were 26 distinct comparisons. The number of patients in studies ranged from 49 to 1005 (median, 262 patients; interquartile range, 112–394). Data for 2719 patients were included in our IBD v functional GID analysis, and for 5431 patients in the organic v functional GID analysis (Box 3). Results were reported with both cut‐off values (50 μg/g, 100 μg/g) for 1887 patients (seven studies) in the IBD v functional GID analysis and for 1067 patients (four studies) in the organic v functional GID analysis (Supporting Information, tables 1 and 2).

Diagnostic performance of faecal calprotectin testing

Fifteen studies employed FC testing to distinguish organic from functional GIDs (Box 3, Supporting Information, table 1): 14 in adults (5117 patients), one in children (50 patients; part of a study with a separate adult group), and one in a mixed population (264 patients). Variation in the sensitivity (summary estimate, 81%; 95% CI, 74–86%) and specificity (summary estimate, 81%; 95% CI, 71–88%) of FC testing for this purpose was small (Box 4, Box 5).

Ten studies employed FC testing to distinguish IBD from functional GIDs (Box 3, Supporting Information, table 2): nine in adults (2455 patients), and one in a mixed child and adult population (264 patients). Variation in the sensitivity (summary estimate, 88%; 95% CI, 80–93%) and specificity (summary estimate, 72%; 95% CI, 59–82%) of FC testing for this purpose was small (Box 4, Box 6).

All eighteen studies were included in the combined diagnostic analysis (distinguishing organic GID or IBD from functional GIDs; Box 3): 17 in adults (5704 patients), one in children (50 patients; part of a study with a separate adult group), and one in a mixed population (264 patients). Variation in the sensitivity (summary estimate, 80%; 95% CI, 73–85%) and specificity (summary estimate, 81%; 95% CI, 70–86%) of FC testing for this purpose was small (Box 4, Box 7).

Given the relatively high prevalence of organic GID reported by the included studies, which can affect the predictive value of a diagnostic test, we calculated the positive and negative predictive values for different population prevalence levels. The positive predictive value at 1% prevalence was 4.2% and the negative predictive value 100%; at 0.1% prevalence, the positive predictive value was 0.40%, the negative predictive value 100%.

Faecal calprotectin pathology reference ranges

Seven studies applied both FC pathology cut‐off points for diagnosing organic GID (Supporting Information, table 1). Sensitivity was generally lower and specificity higher at the cut‐off of 100 μg/g (Box 8), but the effect of cut‐off value on log(DOR) was not statistically significant (P = 0.49).

Discussion

FC testing is clinically employed for assessing bowel inflammation in patients with lower gastrointestinal symptoms; elevated FC levels can distinguish patients with IBD from those with functional GIDs. However, FC levels can also be elevated in other organic GIDs that are diagnosed only after colonoscopy. We therefore performed a meta‐analysis of the ability of FC testing to distinguish between organic and functional GIDs in symptomatic patients without alarm features; in a secondary, unplanned analysis, we assessed its ability to distinguish between patients with IBD and those with functional GIDs.

When considering an invasive test such as colonoscopy, the risk of harm associated with the procedure must be balanced against the risk of a missed diagnosis. Given its high negative predictive value (100%) in low prevalence populations (0.1–1% for organic GID), FC testing is suitable for primary care screening of patients for organic GID, although, given its low positive predictive value, further investigations will be required for patients with elevated FC levels. The main benefits of FC testing in primary care would be to confirm the clinical diagnosis of a functional GID by general practitioners, allowing patients to be appropriately managed, and to reduce the risk of delayed diagnosis of organic GID. This approach would greatly reduce the number of referrals to specialist care of young adults without alarm features, and also the number of more expensive investigations, such as cross‐sectional imaging and colonoscopy.

For distinguishing organic from functional GIDs, the sensitivity of FC testing with a cut‐off of 50 μg/g ranged between 54% and 98% and its specificity between 29% and 96%; for distinguishing IBD from functional GIDs, sensitivity ranged between 56% and 99% and specificity between 29% and 98%. In our sROC analysis, the summary estimate of sensitivity for distinguishing organic from functional gastrointestinal diseases was 81%, the specificity 81%; for distinguishing IBD from functional GIDs, sensitivity was 88% and specificity 72%. Earlier studies16 had found that a cut‐off of 50 μg/g was associated with higher sensitivity and lower specificity, but our analysis found that sensitivity with the 50 μg/g cut‐off was not significantly greater than with 100 μg/g. Nonetheless, the lower cut‐off is appropriate, given the role of FC testing as a screening test for organic GIDs.

Our analysis found that FC testing is effective for identifying patients presenting with abdominal symptoms who require further investigation. It therefore supports guideline recommendations7,8,9,10,11 that symptomatic patients with FC levels below 50 μg/g can be confidently diagnosed with a functional GID and do not require further testing or evaluation by a specialist.

FC testing in primary care facilitates effective and appropriate allocation of resources and reduces unnecessary risk and expense for both the patient and the health system. For patients with non‐specific lower gastrointestinal symptoms, FC testing reduces the risk of missing an organic GID and ensures prompt specialist review if required. A recent Australian study found that FC testing, combined with a routine panel of blood tests, identified patients who needed prompt review by a specialist, improving the safety of local triage practices.42 By excluding organic GID, findings of non‐elevated FC levels also enable early and reliable diagnosis of a functional GID by general practitioners without gastroenterology referral or further testing. Confident diagnosis of a functional GID in primary care is likely to improve patient acceptance of their diagnosis and their uptake of effective management.5

Accurate diagnosis of a functional GID reduces the number of referrals for more expensive and invasive investigations, including colonoscopy. An audit of colonoscopies in an Australian hospital found that 12% were for patients with functional gastrointestinal symptoms; further, 79% of patients seen in a public hospital who were diagnosed with a functional GID had undergone an endoscopic procedure, at an overall cost (including indirect costs) of $187 million, with an additional $2.4 million per year in emergency department presentations and hospital admissions.43 FC testing has consistently been associated with significant cost savings compared with colonoscopy.15,43 Reducing the number of referrals of patients with functional gastrointestinal symptoms to public health secondary care allows limited clinical resources to be used more effectively and appropriately.

Conclusion

Our analysis indicates that FC testing is clinically effective for distinguishing organic GID (including IBD) from functional GIDs in primary care. We strongly encourage its wider implementation as a screening test for patients presenting with lower gastrointestinal symptoms, and for determining whether referral to specialist care conforms with Australian and international guidelines.

Box 1 – Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta‐Analyses (PRISMA) diagram of study selection


 

Box 2 – QUADAS‐2 quality assessment of the 18 included studies


QUADAS‐2 = Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies (revised).

Box 3 – Population characteristics of the 18 studies included in our systematic review and meta‐analysis

Study

Country

Setting, design

Population

Patients

Women

Mean age, years (SD)

Study comparison (v FGID)

Study quality


Limburg 200024

USA

Secondary care, prospective

Adult

110

70 (64%)

57 (16)

OGID, IBD

High

Carrocio 200325

Italy

Secondary care, prospective

Adult

70

40 (57%)

35

OGID

High

Italy

Secondary care, prospective

Children

50

30 (60%)

3.5

OGID

High

D'Inca 200726

Italy

Secondary care, prospective

Adults

67

74 (58%)

49

OGID, IBD

Low

Otten 200827

Netherlands

Secondary care, prospective

Adults

114

61 (54%)

51

OGID

High

Damms 200828

Germany

Secondary care, prospective

Adults

140

78 (56%)

58

IBD

Low

Schoepfer 200829

Switzerland

Secondary care, prospective

Adults

136

118 (60%)

40

IBD

Moderate

El‐Badry 201030

Egypt

Secondary care, prospective

Adult

49

14 (47%)

37

OGID

Moderate

Kok 201231

Netherlands

Primary care, prospective

Adults

382

211 (55%)

60

OGID

High

Burri 201232

Switzerland

Secondary care, prospective

Adult

405

226 (56%)

63

OGID

Low

Pavlidis 201333

UK

Primary care, retrospective

Adult

962

385 (60%)

33

OGID

High

Lozoya Angulo 201534

Spain

Secondary care, prospective

Mixed

264

145 (54%)

Adults: 43
Children: 7

OGID, IBD

High

Dhaliwal 201535

UK

Secondary care, prospective

Adult

311

208 (67%)

NA

IBD

Moderate

Banerjee 201536

UK

Secondary care, retrospective

Adult

119

64 (54%)

46

OGID, IBD

High

Turvill 201637

UK

Primary care, prospective

Adult

262

183 (70%)

37

OGID

High

Högberg 201738

UK

Primary care, prospective

Adult

373

242 (65%)

63

OGID, IBD

High

Conroy 201839

UK

Primary care, prospective

Adults

410

250 (61%)

42

OGID, IBD

High

Walker 201840

UK

Primary care, prospective

Adults

789

473 (60%)

30

OGID, IBD

High

Turvill 201841

UK

Primary care, prospective

Adults

1005

633 (63%)

38

OGID

Moderate


FGID = functional gastrointestinal disorder; IBD = inflammatory bowel disease; NA = not available; OGID = organic gastrointestinal disease; SD = standard deviation; UK = United Kingdom; USA = United States of America.

Box 4 – Faecal calprotectin testing for distinguishing between organic and functional gastrointestinal diseases: summary statistics

Accuracy

OGID v FGID

IBD v FGID

OGID or IBD v FGID


Sensitivity (95% CI)

81% (74–86%)

88% (80–93%)

80% (73–85%)

Specificity (95% CI)

81% (71–88%)

72% (59–82%)

81% (70–86%)

Log diagnostic odds ratio (95% CI)

3.0 (2.4–3.6)

3.2 (2.5–3.9)

3.1 (2.5–3.6)

Area under the curve

0.87

0.89

0.86


CI = confidence interval; FGID = functional gastrointestinal disorder; IBD = inflammatory bowel disease; OGID = organic gastrointestinal disease.

Box 5 – Faecal calprotectin testing for distinguishing between organic disease and functional gastrointestinal disorders


sROC = summary receiver operating characteristic. The study by Carrocio and colleagues included separate groups of adult (a) and child (c) patients.

Box 6 – Faecal calprotectin testing for distinguishing between inflammatory bowel disease and functional gastrointestinal disorders


sROC = summary receiver operating characteristic.

Box 7 – Faecal calprotectin testing for distinguishing between organic gastrointestinal disease or inflammatory bowel disease and functional gastrointestinal disorders


sROC = summary receiver operating characteristic. The study by Carrocio and colleagues included separate groups of adult (a) and child (c) patients.

Box 8 – Comparison of the diagnostic accuracy at two different faecal calprotectin test cut‐off values*


* The area of each symbol is proportional to the inverse variance of the estimate. In panel A, the lower left symbol of each pair corresponds to a cut‐off of 100 μg/g, the higher right symbol to one of 50 μg/g.


Provenance: Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.

Received 25 November 2024, accepted 25 November 2024

  • Yoon‐Kyo An1,2
  • David Prince3,4
  • Fergus Gardiner5,6
  • Teresa Neeman7
  • Ecushla C Linedale8
  • Jane M Andrews9
  • Susan Connor3,4
  • Jakob Begun1,10

  • 1 Mater Hospital Brisbane, Brisbane, QLD
  • 2 University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD
  • 3 Liverpool Hospital, Sydney, NSW
  • 4 South Western Sydney Clinical School, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW
  • 5 Royal Flying Doctor Service, Canberra, ACT
  • 6 National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT
  • 7 Australian National University, Canberra, ACT
  • 8 University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA
  • 9 Royal Adelaide Hospital, Adelaide, SA
  • 10 Mater Research Institute, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD


Correspondence: yoon.an@mater.org.au

Competing interests:

No relevant disclosures.

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