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How well point-of-care pancreatic lipase tests diagnose pancreatitis

By Liu, Pin-Chen et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2025·Department of Veterinary Medicine·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Assessment of point-of-care quantitative serum canine pancreatic lipase testing for diagnosing acute pancreatitis in dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs suspected of having acute pancreatitis (a painful inflammation of the pancreas) were tested using a new blood test called Vcheck CPL, which measures a specific enzyme. The results showed that dogs with pancreatitis had much higher levels of this enzyme compared to healthy dogs. Over a few days in the hospital, the enzyme levels decreased in the dogs with pancreatitis, indicating improvement. This new test appears to work well alongside other tests and could help veterinarians diagnose this condition more accurately.

People also search for: dog pancreatitis symptoms · Vcheck CPL test for dogs · how to treat dog pancreatitis

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Current point-of-care testing for canine-specific pancreatic lipase (CPL) provides semi-quantitative measurements with binary results. Recently, a commercial point-of-care testing method (Vcheck CPL) that offers quantitative measurement of CPL has emerged. However, clinical studies on its value (or utility) are limited. Therefore, this study aimed to evaluate the clinical utility of this commercial point-of-care CPL in diagnosing dogs with suspected acute pancreatitis and to assess its correlation with a commercial semi-quantitative test and other clinicopathological variables. METHODS: A prospective observational study included 33 dogs with suspected acute pancreatitis and 20 clinically healthy dogs. Serum Vcheck CPL and SNAP &#xae; cPL were tested, and clinical consensus scores were determined by 5 internists. Eleven dogs with suspected acute pancreatitis underwent follow-up testing during hospitalization. The intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) was used for statistical analysis to assess the agreement between assays and the internists' consensus score. RESULTS: Dogs with suspected acute pancreatitis had significantly higher serum Vcheck CPL (median: 843&#x202f;&#x3bc;g/L, range: 77-2001,&#x202f;<&#x202f;0.0001) than healthy control dogs (median: 94&#x202f;&#x3bc;g/L, range: 49-294). By day 3 of hospitalization, serum Vcheck CPL had significantly decreased in dogs with suspected acute pancreatitis compared to day 1. The ICC score between the clinical consensus score, Vcheck CPL, and SNAP &#xae; cPL was 0.75, indicating good agreement. Serum Vcheck CPL concentration was significantly correlated with serum concentrations of amylase, lipase, creatinine, ALP, and CRP. DISCUSSION: This study found good agreement between Vcheck CPL and SNAP &#xae; cPL. This quantitative Vcheck CPL testing could serve as an adjunctive tool in diagnosing dogs with acute pancreatitis.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40012749/