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Journal of Clinical Microbiology logoLink to Journal of Clinical Microbiology
. 1992 May;30(5):1238–1242. doi: 10.1128/jcm.30.5.1238-1242.1992

Measurement of fecal lactoferrin as a marker of fecal leukocytes.

R L Guerrant 1, V Araujo 1, E Soares 1, K Kotloff 1, A A Lima 1, W H Cooper 1, A G Lee 1
PMCID: PMC265257  PMID: 1583125

Abstract

While diarrheal illnesses are extremely common in communities and hospitals throughout the world, an etiologic diagnosis may be expensive and cost-ineffective. Although the presence of fecal leukocytes are helpful in the diagnosis and specific therapy of inflammatory diarrheas, this requires prompt microscopic examination of fecal specimens (preferably obtained in a cup rather than a swab or diaper) by a trained observer. We developed a simple, sensitive test for the detection of leukocytes in fecal specimens using antilactoferrin antibody. Whereas radial immunodiffusion detected 0.02 micrograms of lactoferrin (LF) per microliter or greater than or equal to 2,000 leukocytes per microliter, latex agglutination (LA) readily detected greater than or equal to 0.001 micrograms of LF per microliter or greater than or equal to 200 leukocytes per microliter added to stool specimens. Despite the destruction or loss of morphologic leukocytes on storage for 1 to 7 days at 4 degrees C or placement of specimens on swabs, measurable LF remained stable. Initial studies of stool specimens from six patients with Salmonella or Clostridium difficile enteritis were positive and those from three controls were negative for LF by LA. Of 17 children in Brazil with inflammatory diarrhea (greater than or equal to 1 leukocyte per high-power field), 16 (94%) had LF titers of greater than 1:50 by LA, whereas only 3 of 12 fecal specimens with less than 1 leukocyte per high-power field on methylene blue examination and none of 7 normal control specimens had an LF titer of greater than 1:50 by LA. Of 16 fecal specimens from patients with C. difficile diarrhea (cytotoxin titers, >/= 1:1,000), 95% (n = 15) had detectable LF by LA (in titers of 1:100 to 1: 800). Finally, of 48 fecal specimens from healthy adult U.S. volunteers before and after experimental shigellosis and of 29 fecal specimens from children with documented shigellosis and hospitalized controls in northeastern Brazil, fecal LF titers ranged from 1:200 to >/= 1:5,000 in 96% (25 of 26) samples from patients with shigellosis (and reported positive for fecal leukocytes), while 51 controls consistently had fecal LF titers of </= 1:200. We conclude that fecal LF is a useful marker for fecal leukocytes, even when they are morphologically lost swab specimens or when they are destroyed on transport or storage or by cytotoxic fecal specimens.

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Selected References

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