AI Article Synopsis

  • Environmental enteric dysfunction (EED) affects children's growth by damaging intestinal function, with the C-sucrose breath test (C-SBT) proposed as a method to measure sucrase-isomaltase (SIM) activity, which may be impaired in EED.
  • A study was conducted using data from 16 adults receiving varying doses of Reducose to analyze the effectiveness of different classifiers in predicting SIM activity based on C-SBT results over various test durations.
  • Results showed that tests shorter than 2 hours were generally unreliable, with the cumulative percent dose recovered at 90 minutes (cPDR90) emerging as the most accurate classifier, but further research is needed to confirm these

Article Abstract

Background: Environmental enteric dysfunction (EED) is a syndrome characterized by epithelial damage including blunting of the small intestinal villi and altered digestive and absorptive capacity which may negatively impact linear growth in children. The C-sucrose breath test ( C-SBT) has been proposed to estimate sucrase-isomaltase (SIM) activity, which is thought to be reduced in EED. We previously showed how various summary measures of the C-SBT breath curve reflect SIM inhibition. However, it is uncertain how the performance of these classifiers is affected by test duration.

Methods: We leveraged SBT data from a cross-over study in 16 adults who received 0, 100, and 750 mg of Reducose, a natural SIM inhibitor. We evaluated the performance of a pharmacokinetic-model-based classifier, , and three empirical classifiers (cumulative percent dose recovered at 90 minutes (cPDR90), time to 50% dose recovered, and time to peak dose recovery rate), as a function of test duration using receiver operating characteristic curves. We also assessed the sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of consensus classifiers.

Results: Test durations of less than 2 hours generally failed to accurately predict later breath curve dynamics. The cPDR90 classifier had the highest area-under-the-curve and, by design, was robust to shorter test durations. For detecting mild SIM inhibition, had a higher sensitivity.

Conclusions: We recommend SBT tests run for at least a 2-hour duration. Although cPDR90 was the classifier with highest accuracy and robustness to test duration in this application, concerns remain about its sensitivity to misspecification of CO production rate. More research is needed to assess these classifiers in target populations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11092706PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.05.01.24306704DOI Listing

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