Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine (Sep 2023)

Fecal acute phase proteins in cats with chronic enteropathies

  • Dimitra A. Karra,
  • Chris C. Chadwick,
  • Evangelia M. Stavroulaki,
  • Matina N. Pitropaki,
  • Evgenia Flouraki,
  • Karin Allenspach,
  • Jonathan A. Lidbury,
  • Joerg M. Steiner,
  • Panagiotis G. Xenoulis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/jvim.16802
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 37, no. 5
pp. 1750 – 1759

Abstract

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Abstract Background Chronic enteropathies (CE) are common in cats and reliable biomarkers that can distinguish different causes and predict or monitor response to treatment are currently lacking. Hypothesis To evaluate certain acute phase proteins in feces that could potentially be used as biomarkers in cats with CE. Animals Twenty‐eight cats with either inflammatory bowel disease (IBD; n = 13), food‐responsive enteropathy (FRE; n = 3) or small cell gastrointestinal lymphoma (SCGL; n = 12) and 29 healthy control cats were prospectively enrolled. Methods Fecal concentrations of haptoglobin, alpha‐1‐acid‐glycoprotein (AGP), pancreatitis‐associated protein‐1 (PAP‐1), ceruloplasmin, and C‐reactive protein (CRP) were measured using Spatial Proximity Analyte Reagent Capture Luminescence (SPARCL) immunoassays before and after initiation of treatment. Cats were treated with diet and/or prednisolone (IBD cats), plus chlorambucil (SCGL cats). Results Compared with controls, median fecal AGP concentrations were significantly lower (25.1 vs 1.8 μg/g; P = .003) and median fecal haptoglobin (0.17 vs 0.5 μg/g), PAP‐1 (0.04 vs 0.4 μg/g) and ceruloplasmin (0.15 vs 4.2 μg/g) concentrations were significantly higher (P < .001) in cats with CE. Median fecal AGP concentrations were significantly lower (P = .01) in cats with IBD and FRE (0.6 μg/g) compared with cats with SCGL (10.75 μg/g). A significant reduction was found in CE cats after treatment for median fecal ceruloplasmin concentrations (6.36 vs 1.16 μg/g; P = .04). Conclusions Fecal AGP concentration shows promise to differentiate cats with SCGL from cats with IBD and FRE. Fecal ceruloplasmin concentrations may be useful to objectively monitor response to treatment in cats with CE.

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