Afro-Egypt J Infect Endem
Dis 2016 March ; 6(1):60
Value of
Serum Neopterin Level in Evaluating Ulcerative Colitis Disease Activity
El-Hady HA,El-Nemr SA, Ahmed
HS
Tropical Medicine Department, Faculty of Medicine, Zagazig University ,Egypt.
alnimrsahar@yahoo.com
ABSTRACT
Background and study aim:
Ulcerative colitis (UC) is a major type of
inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). It is characterized by chronic
inflammation of the large bowel occurring in genetically susceptible individuals
exposed to environmental factors and typically, has a relapsing–remitting
pattern.
Neopterin serves as a
marker of
cellular immune system
activation.
This study aims to evaluate serum neopterin concentration as being a new
biomarker for U.C. disease activity evaluation and to correlate it with some of
the other markers of disease activity.
Patients
and methods:
This study included 80 subjects, twenty apparently healthy volunteers as a
control group (Group I) that included (13 male and 7 female, mean age ± SD 36.0
± 12.6 y) and sixty patients with UC disease as a patient group (Group II) that
included (46 male and14 female, Mean age ± SD 35.5 ± 9.6 y) Group II was
subdevided into 20 patients recently diagnosed as active U.C. disease, 20
patients clinically in relapse and 20 patients clinically in remission.
Colonoscope and calculation of Simple Ulcerative Colitis Clinical Activity Index
Score (SCCAIS) was done for patients with U.C. Laboratory investigations as
complete blood count (CBC), erythrocytic sedimentation rate (ESR), Complete
liver and kidney function tests, Prothrombin time (PT), partial thromboplastin
(PTT), International Normalizing Ratio (INR) and determination of serum
neopterin level were done for all subjects.
Results:
Serum neopterin level for the U.C. patients
was (Mean ± SD= 18.6 ± 5.79, range= 6 – 40) which is highly significant
than the control subjects with ( Mean ± SD = 5.9 ± 2.4, Range = 2.7 – 9.8).
Serum neopterin concentration was positively correlated with SCCAIS ( r = 0.77
and P-value <0.001) that indicates a high
significant relation between serum neopterin level and clinical active
U.C. than in those whose disease was in clinical remission.
Serum neopterin concentration was positively
correlated with ESR, TLC, platelet count and PT (r= 0.71, P-value <0.001), (r=
0.41, P-value <0.001), (r= 0.34, P-value <0.01) (r= 0.28, P-value <0.05) respectively, whereas negatively
correlated with Hb. (r= -0.56, P-value =
<0.001) and albumin (r= -0.35, P-value
<0.01). There was statistically a high significant relation between serum
neopterin level and endoscopic disease distribution (P-value <0.001) as serum
neopterin level increases with the increasing of the U.C. disease extent.
Conclusions and Recommendations:
Serum neopterin concentration can be used
as a new biomarker for U.C. activity that could reliably distinguish between clinically active and inactive
U.C., as well as, it can be a helpful tool in predicting the stage of the
disease activity. Moreover, the degree of elevation in serum neopterin
concentration may be in part related to location and extent of disease.