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. 2016 Aug 18;9:51–62. doi: 10.4137/CGast.S38203

Table 1.

Role of laboratory tests used in the clinical management of Crohn’s disease.

LABORATORY TEST ROLE COMMENT
CRP and ESR Assessment of disease activity
Monitoring disease activity
Predicting disease course
Monitoring response to therapy
Used in clinical practice
Objective measure of inflammation
Cheap
Low specifity
Other acute phase-reactant:
Orosomucoids
Beta2microglobulin
Sialic acid
Assessment of disease activity Not routinely available
Potentially useful to integrate CRP
Fecal calprotectin Assessment of disease activity
Monitoring disease activity
Predicting disease course
Monitoring response to therapy
A surrogate marker of intestinal inflammation in IBD related to endoscopy activity
Discriminating IBD from irritable bowel syndrome
Can be used to avoid invasive procedures
Accuracy demonstrated in the assessment of response to anti-TNF therapy
Increasingly use in clinical trials of novel therapies
Fecal lactoferrin Assessment of disease activity
Monitoring disease activity
Predicting disease course
Monitoring response to therapy
A surrogate marker of intestinal inflammation in IBD
Used in the assessment of response to anti-TNF therapy
Less stable at room temperature, used in research
Complete blood cell count (WBC, Hb, platelets) Assessment of disease activity
Monitoring disease activity
Identifying complications
Routine evaluation of recurrence
Diagnosis of intercurrent infections
Diagnosis of anemia
Monitoring of drug safety (thiopurines)
Serum iron, TIBC, transferrin, ferritin, Albumin, Vitamin B12, folate Assessment of nutrional status
Identifying complications
Diagnosis of iron-deficiency anemia
Evaluation of malnutrition and selective deficiencies
Anti-Saccharomyces cerevisiae antibodies (ASCA)
Anti-ompc
Anti-pseudomonas 12
Anti-flagellin
Antibodies- anti serum microbial antigens more specific for Crohn’s disease Discriminating Crohn’s disease from ulcerative colitis in colonic IBD
High titres related to early surgery and complications
Intestinal fatty acid binding proteins (FABPs) Plasma and urine marker that indicates intestinal damage Evidence from research
Not used in clinical practice
PGRN antibodies (PGRN-Abs) Proinflammatory effects Evidence from research
Not used in clinical practice
Virology studies:
HBV Markers
Anti-HCV
Anti-HIV
EBV status
CMV-DNA
Tuberculin Skin Test (TST)
Quantiferon-TB
Screening candidates to biologics and thiopurines
Assessment of refractory colitis
Recommended by clinical practice guidelines to prevent viral infections and latent TB reactivations
CMV superinfection related to refractoriness of acute colitis
EBV negative subjects can develop EBV-related lymphoproliferative dysorders
Anti-TNF trough levels and antibodies
Thiopurine metabolites
Therapeutic drug monitoring Approach to personalized therapy and safety and costs optimization strategy
TPMT (thiopurine polymorphisms) testing Selecting candidates to thiopurines Pharmacogenomic approach
Use in clinical practice debated