Original article
Alimentary tract
Agreement Between Home-Based Measurement of Stool Calprotectin and ELISA Results for Monitoring Inflammatory Bowel Disease Activity

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cgh.2017.06.007Get rights and content
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Background & Aims

An increasing number of physicians use repeated measurements of stool calprotectin to monitor intestinal inflammation in patients with inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs). A lateral flow-based rapid test allows patients to measure their own stool calprotectin values at home. The test comes with a software application (IBDoc; Bühlmann Laboratories AG, Schönenbuch, Switzerland) that turns a smartphone camera into a results reader. We compared results from this method with those from the hospital-based reader (Quantum Blue; Bühlmann Laboratories AG) and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) analysis.

Methods

In a single-center comparison study, we asked 101 participants (10 years of age or older) in the Netherlands to perform the IBDoc measurement on stool samples collected at home, from June 2015 to October 2016. Participants then sent the residual extraction fluid and a fresh specimen from the same bowel movement to our pediatric and adult IBD center at the University Medical Center Groningen, where the level of calprotectin was measured by the Quantum Blue reader and ELISA analysis, respectively. The primary outcome was the agreement of results between IBDoc and the Quantum Blue and ELISA analyses, determined by Bland-Altman plot analysis.

Results

We received 152 IBDoc results, 138 samples of residual extraction fluid for Quantum Blue analysis, and 170 fresh stool samples for ELISA analysis. Spearman’s rank correlation coefficient was 0.94 for results obtained by IBDoc vs Quantum Blue and 0.85 for results obtained by IBDoc vs ELISA. At the low range of calprotectin level (<500 μg/g), 91% of IBDoc–Quantum Blue results were within the predefined limits of agreement (±100 μg/g), and 71% of IBDoc–ELISA results were in agreement. At the high range of calprotectin level (≥500 μg/g), 81% of IBDoc–Quantum Blue results were within the predefined limits of agreement (±200 μg/g) and 64% of IBDoc–ELISA results were in agreement.

Conclusions

Measurements of fecal levels of calprotectin made with home-based lateral flow method were in agreement with measurements made by Quantum Blue and ELISA, as long as concentrations were <500 μg/g. For patients with concentrations of fecal calprotectin above this level, findings from IBDoc should be confirmed by another method. (Netherlands Trial Registration Number: NTR5133).

Keywords

Biomarker
Telemedicine
Point-of-care test
Monitoring IBD Activity

Abbreviations used in this paper

CI
confidence interval
ELISA
enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
FC
fecal calprotectin
IBD
inflammatory bowel disease

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Conflicts of interest The authors declare no conflicts.

Funding This work was supported by Bühlmann Laboratories AG, manufacturer of the IBDoc home test, Quantum Blue rapid test, and the fCAL ELISA assay used in this study. Bühlmann did not have a role in the design, execution, analyses, and interpretation of the data, or in the decision to submit the results.