Faecal calprotectin...a #tweetorial
What is FC?
Protein complex found within cytosol of neutrophils
Intestinal inflammation
influx of neutrophils into gut lumen
FC resistant to enzymatic degradation so easily measured in 
Non-invasive biomarker of intestinal inflammation






How do I check FC?
Stool sample in a CALEX tube to Biochem
Ideally first stool of the day
Collection instructions available via FirstPort ( http://shorturl.at/htC48 )



When should I check FC?
Adult patients 16-40y with new lower GI symptoms (e.g. abdominal pain, diarrhoea) for >4 weeks
Monitoring in IBD


Main uses of FC:
Differentiating between IBD (FC typically elevated) and IBS (FC typically normal)
Follow up of IBD patients: surrogate marker for mucosal healing in IBD - can be used to assess disease activity, predict risk of relapse, assess efficacy of treatment


Don’t check FC...
In patients >40y with new lower GI symptoms (send a qFIT then instead...qFIT tweetorial coming soon!)
Acute diarrhoea
As initial test in new bloody diarrhoea - FC invariably elevated in this scenario & colonoscopy warranted provided stool cultures neg



What’s normal when FC used to differentiate between IBD & IBS?
Normal: FC <100 - in patients aged 16-40y meeting Rome III criteria with normal Hb/inflammatory markers/TTG and no alarm symptoms, manage as IBS
Elevated: >200 - refer to gastro for consideration of colonoscopy


What about FC results between 100-200?
Equivocal: 100-200 ug/g stool - repeat in 4/12 & refer gastro if ≥100 ug/g stool when repeated
FC <200 ug/g stool rarely associated with IBD or other significant luminal pathology in adult patients 16-40y with no alarm symptoms


Caution...
Elevated FC not diagnostic of IBD - it’s a prompt to consider further investigations to exclude IBD
such as NSAIDs & PPIs can falsely elevate FC




