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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Biomarkers to diagnose and monitor inflammatory bowel disease in dogs

By Heilmann, Romy M & Steiner, Jörg M·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2018·Small Animal Clinic, Germany·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Clinical utility of currently available biomarkers in inflammatory enteropathies of dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 5-year-old Beagle was brought in for ongoing vomiting and diarrhea, which are signs of chronic inflammatory enteropathy (CIE). The veterinarian assessed the dog and found that standard tests weren't clearly identifying the specific type of CIE. Researchers have been looking into various biomarkers that could help diagnose and monitor these conditions more effectively. While the study reviewed many potential biomarkers, the best approach for treatment often involves dietary changes or medications tailored to the dog's specific needs. With the right treatment plan, many dogs with CIE can see improvements in their symptoms.

People also search for: dog vomiting diarrhea treatment · Beagle chronic inflammatory enteropathy · dog gastrointestinal disease symptoms

Abstract

Chronic inflammatory enteropathies (CIE) in dogs are a group of disorders that are characterized by chronic persistent or recurrent signs of gastrointestinal disease and histologic evidence of mucosal inflammation. These CIEs are classified as either food-responsive, antibiotic-responsive, or immunosuppressant-responsive enteropathy. Patients not clinically responding to immunomodulatory treatment are grouped as nonresponsive enteropathy and dogs with intestinal protein loss as protein-losing enteropathy. Disease-independent clinical scoring systems were established in dogs for assessment of clinical disease severity and patient monitoring during treatment. Histopathologic and routine clinicopathologic findings are usually not able to distinguish the subgroups of CIE. Treatment trials are often lengthy and further diagnostic tests are usually at least minimally invasive. Biomarkers that can aid in defining the presence of disease, site of origin, severity of the disease process, response to treatment, or a combination of these would be clinically useful in dogs with CIE. This article summarizes the following biomarkers that have been evaluated in dogs with CIE during the last decade, and critically evaluates their potential clinical utility in dogs with CIE: functional biomarkers (cobalamin, methylmalonic acid, folate, α-proteinase inhibitor, immunoglobulin A), biochemical biomarkers (C-reactive protein, perinuclear anti-neutrophilic cytoplasmic antibodies, 3-bromotyrosine, N-methylhistamine, calprotectin, S100A12, soluble receptor of advanced glycation end products, cytokines and chemokines, alkaline phosphatase), microbiomic biomarkers (microbiome changes, dysbiosis index), metabolomic biomarkers (serum metabolome), genetic biomarkers (genomic markers, gene expression changes), and cellular biomarkers (regulatory T cells). In addition, important performance criteria of diagnostic tests are briefly reviewed.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30222209/