Background: In coeliac disease it has been demonstrated that the indirect pancreatic function tests detect a greater percentage of subjects with exocrine pancreatic insufficiency than the secretin-caerulein test.

Aims: To evaluate faecal pancreatic elastase-1 assay in monitoring patients with coeliac disease.

Patients: Thirty patients with coeliac disease (11 m; age range 1-7 years) completed a 2-month follow-up. As controls, we studied two sex-, age-matched patient groups: a) 15 patients with cystic fibrosis, b) 40 surgical patients without gastroenterological disease.

Methods: In all coeliac subjects, stools were collected over 24 hours at diagnosis and then 30 and 60 days after commencement of the gluten-free diet; on a sample of the faeces we assayed elastase-1 activity. In the control patients, faeces were collected over 24 hours for elastase-1 assay only once. The coeliac patients only underwent the secretin-caerulein test, at diagnosis.

Results: Ten out of 30 coeliac patients (33%) had subnormal faecal elastase-1 values at diagnosis, while all the surgical controls had values within the normal range; median values in coeliac patients were significantly lower than those of the surgical controls (median 287 mcg/g, 95% CI 271-430, versus 487 mcg/g, 95% CI 426-538, p < 0.007). Cystic fibrosis patient values (median 10 mcg/g, 95% CI 7-155) were significantly lower than both those of coeliac patients and those of the surgical controls (p < 0.0001). The secretin-caerulein test showed that 7/30 coeliac patients (23%) had a deficiency in one or more pancreatic enzymes; all these subjects had below normal faecal elastase-1 values. During the follow-up, we observed a progressive reduction in the number of coeliacs with pancreatic impairment; however, after 2 months of gluten-free diet, faecal elastase-1 deficiency persisted in 2/30 coeliacs.

Conclusions: Faecal elastase-1 determination in coeliac patients reveals a similar frequency and duration of pancreatic impairment to those observed in studies performed using the faecal chymotrypsin assay; a reduction in faecal elastase-1 values can be linked to "non-typical pancreatic diseases".

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