AI Article Synopsis

  • Chronic pancreatitis (CP) can result in significant pancreatic exocrine insufficiency (PEI), leading to higher fecal fat and energy loss in affected patients compared to healthy controls.
  • An interventional study with 10 CP patients and 12 healthy controls demonstrated that increasing doses of pancreatic enzyme replacement therapy (PERT) significantly reduced fecal fat and energy loss once maximum doses were reached.
  • The findings indicate a strong correlation between fecal energy loss and both fecal fat loss and stool weight, suggesting that effective PERT could improve nutrient absorption in CP patients with PEI.

Article Abstract

Background: Chronic pancreatitis (CP) can lead to severe pancreatic exocrine insufficiency (PEI). Pancreatic enzyme replacement therapy (PERT) is well established, but knowledge of the physiological response to increasing doses on fecal fat- and energy loss is scarce.

Methods: We included 10 patients with CP and established PEI and 12 healthy controls for a prospective interventional study. Subjects received no PERT in the first week followed by four weeks PERT incrementally increasing doses every week. For each week, three-day stool collection followed three days registration of nutritional intake. We measured the fecal output of fat and energy by van de Kamer titration and decomposition vessel calorimetry, respectively. We calculated fecal fat- and energy loss per day, the coefficient of fat absorption (CFA) and coefficient of energy absorption (CEA).

Results: Without PERT treatment, CP patients with PEI had significantly higher daily fecal fat and energy loss (p = .022; p = .035) compared to HC. In CP patients, there was a significant reduction of fecal fat and energy loss (p = .045; p = .037) when PERT doses reached maximum intake of 75,000 units per meal. In CP patients, there was a strong positive correlation between fecal loss of energy and fat (r = 0.99), and between fecal loss of energy and daily stool weight (r = 0.97). CFA and CEA correlated negatively with daily fecal fat loss (r = -0.72) and fecal energy loss (r = -0.65).

Conclusions: PERT reduces fecal energy and fat loss in patients with CP and PEI. Fecal energy loss in CP patients is strongly dependent on fecal fat loss, and on fecal weight.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00365521.2018.1499801DOI Listing

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