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February 21, 2023
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Updated AGA guidelines urge use of biomarkers for the management of UC

Fact checked byHeather Biele
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New AGA clinical practice guidelines highlight the role of noninvasive biomarkers, including fecal calprotectin, fecal lactoferrin and C-reactive protein, for the management of patients with ulcerative colitis.

Perspective from Miguel Regueiro, MD

“Despite the fact that early proactive assessment of bowel inflammation is associated with superior long-term outcomes, there is significant variability in utilization,” Siddharth Singh, MD, assistant professor of medicine at the University of California, San Diego, and colleagues wrote in Gastroenterology. “Moreover, in routine clinical practice, repeated endoscopic assessment is invasive, expensive and may be impractical.”

Guideline highlights
Data derived from: Singh S, et al. Gastroenterology. 2023;doi:10.1053/j.gastro.2022.12.007.

They continued, “There is an important need for understanding how noninvasive biomarkers may serve as accurate and reliable surrogates for endoscopic assessment of inflammation and whether they can be more readily implemented in a UC care pathway.”

Siddharth Singh, MD
Siddharth Singh

Using the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation framework, Singh and colleagues prioritized clinical questions, identified patient-centered outcomes and analyzed clinical performance of serum CRP, fecal calprotectin and fecal lactoferrin as disease activity biomarkers in patients with UC.

Highlights of the seven conditional recommendations include:

  • Monitoring strategy should include biomarkers and symptoms, rather than symptoms alone, in patients with active UC, as well as those in symptomatic remission.
  • Fecal calprotectin less than 150 µg/g, normal fecal lactoferrin or normal CRP can be used to rule out active inflammation in patients in symptomatic remission. Avoid additional routine endoscopic assessment of disease activity.
  • For patients in symptomatic remission with elevated inflammation markers (fecal calprotectin > 150 µg/g, elevated fecal lactoferrin or elevated CRP), or moderate to severe symptoms and normal biomarkers, use endoscopic assessment to inform treatment decisions.
  • For patients with mild symptoms and normal inflammation biomarkers, use endoscopic assessment to inform treatment decisions.
  • Patients with moderate to severe symptoms suggestive of flare should be evaluated using fecal calprotectin greater than 150 µg/g, elevated fecal lactoferrin or elevated CRP to rule in active inflammation.

The AGA made no recommendation in favor of or against a biomarker-based monitoring strategy over endoscopy-based monitoring, as more information is needed. “The evidence panel identified numerous knowledge gaps in the literature where there were insufficient data to inform recommendations,” Singh and colleagues wrote.

Future research, they noted, should include analysis on the timing of measuring biomarkers, biomarker-based treat-to-target strategies, prognostic significance of biomarkers and biomarker performance in diverse populations.