1.Comparative study on determination of fecal calprotectin by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and fluorescence immunochromatography assay
Sinan XIAO ; Haitao SHI ; Kairuo WANG ; Kairong SU ; Xin LIU
Chinese Journal of Inflammatory Bowel Diseases 2025;09(5):404-411
Objective:To compare the diagnostic efficacy and consistency of fecal calprotectin (FC) detected by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and fluorescence immunochromatography assay (FICA) in assessing the disease activity of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) .Methods:The paired-design diagnostic test comparison study was conducted. A total of 61 IBD patients from the Second Affiliated Hospital of Xi'an Jiaotong University who underwent simultaneous ELISA and FICA testing from May to June 2025 were prospectively enrolled. Using Best Crohn's disease activity index and modified Mayo score as gold standards, optimal FC cut-offs for assessing the disease activity were determined by receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis. Numerical consistency was evaluated via Spearman correlation, Passing-Bablok regression, and Bland-Altman analysis. Classification consistency was assessed by Cohen's Kappa coefficient based on both manufacturer-recommended cut-offs (ELISA: 200 μg/g, FICA: 100 μg/g) and ROC-optimized cut-offs.Results:Of the 61 patients, 28 were male and 33 were female, with a median age of 48 (34, 61) years and a disease duration of 48 (12, 109) months; 43 had ulcerative colitis (UC) and 18 had Crohn's disease (CD) ; 35 were in remission and 26 were in the active stage. Median FC concentrations were 178.0 (30.0, 1 342.0) μg/g by ELISA and 67.2 (15.0, 275.6) μg/g by FICA. The area under the curve (AUC) for ELISA in diagnosing activity of IBD was 0.930, with a sensitivity of 80.0% and specificity of 96.2% at the optimal cut-off of 154.0 μg/g. The AUC for FICA was 0.784, with a sensitivity of 80.0% and specificity of 80.8% at the optimal cut-off of 81.2 μg/g. DeLong test showed that the overall diagnostic efficacy of ELISA was significantly superior to that of FICA ( Z = 2.550, P = 0.011). Spearman correlation analysis showed a correlation coefficient of 0.62 (95% CI: 0.41-0.73, P < 0.001) between ELISA and FICA results. The Cusum linearity test indicated a linear relationship between the two methods ( P = 0.291). Passing-Bablok regression yielded the equation y = -53.38 + 5.56x, indicating both significant constant and proportional systematic errors between ELISA and FICA, and the errors increased with the concentrations. Bland-Altman analysis demonstrated ELISA assay values were systematically higher than those of FICA (overall mean bias: 74.5%, 95% limits of agreement: -101.0% to 250.0%), with larger differences in active disease than remission (the mean bias: 100.4% vs. 48.0%). Classification consistency improved markedly when using ROC-optimized cut-offs compared with manufacturer-recommended cut-offs (Kappa: 0.608 vs. 0.474) . Conclusions:Both ELISA and FICA can effectively identify active IBD but exhibit concentration-dependent systematic bias (ELISA > FICA). The consistent use of a single assay is recommended for disease monitoring and ROC-optimized cut-offs are adopted to improve the accuracy of disease activity stratification.
2.Comparative study on determination of fecal calprotectin by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and fluorescence immunochromatography assay
Sinan XIAO ; Haitao SHI ; Kairuo WANG ; Kairong SU ; Xin LIU
Chinese Journal of Inflammatory Bowel Diseases 2025;09(5):404-411
Objective:To compare the diagnostic efficacy and consistency of fecal calprotectin (FC) detected by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and fluorescence immunochromatography assay (FICA) in assessing the disease activity of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) .Methods:The paired-design diagnostic test comparison study was conducted. A total of 61 IBD patients from the Second Affiliated Hospital of Xi'an Jiaotong University who underwent simultaneous ELISA and FICA testing from May to June 2025 were prospectively enrolled. Using Best Crohn's disease activity index and modified Mayo score as gold standards, optimal FC cut-offs for assessing the disease activity were determined by receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis. Numerical consistency was evaluated via Spearman correlation, Passing-Bablok regression, and Bland-Altman analysis. Classification consistency was assessed by Cohen's Kappa coefficient based on both manufacturer-recommended cut-offs (ELISA: 200 μg/g, FICA: 100 μg/g) and ROC-optimized cut-offs.Results:Of the 61 patients, 28 were male and 33 were female, with a median age of 48 (34, 61) years and a disease duration of 48 (12, 109) months; 43 had ulcerative colitis (UC) and 18 had Crohn's disease (CD) ; 35 were in remission and 26 were in the active stage. Median FC concentrations were 178.0 (30.0, 1 342.0) μg/g by ELISA and 67.2 (15.0, 275.6) μg/g by FICA. The area under the curve (AUC) for ELISA in diagnosing activity of IBD was 0.930, with a sensitivity of 80.0% and specificity of 96.2% at the optimal cut-off of 154.0 μg/g. The AUC for FICA was 0.784, with a sensitivity of 80.0% and specificity of 80.8% at the optimal cut-off of 81.2 μg/g. DeLong test showed that the overall diagnostic efficacy of ELISA was significantly superior to that of FICA ( Z = 2.550, P = 0.011). Spearman correlation analysis showed a correlation coefficient of 0.62 (95% CI: 0.41-0.73, P < 0.001) between ELISA and FICA results. The Cusum linearity test indicated a linear relationship between the two methods ( P = 0.291). Passing-Bablok regression yielded the equation y = -53.38 + 5.56x, indicating both significant constant and proportional systematic errors between ELISA and FICA, and the errors increased with the concentrations. Bland-Altman analysis demonstrated ELISA assay values were systematically higher than those of FICA (overall mean bias: 74.5%, 95% limits of agreement: -101.0% to 250.0%), with larger differences in active disease than remission (the mean bias: 100.4% vs. 48.0%). Classification consistency improved markedly when using ROC-optimized cut-offs compared with manufacturer-recommended cut-offs (Kappa: 0.608 vs. 0.474) . Conclusions:Both ELISA and FICA can effectively identify active IBD but exhibit concentration-dependent systematic bias (ELISA > FICA). The consistent use of a single assay is recommended for disease monitoring and ROC-optimized cut-offs are adopted to improve the accuracy of disease activity stratification.
3.A case of idiopathic myointimal hyperplasia of the mesenteric veins of the cecum
Kairong SU ; Haitao SHI ; Jie WU ; Sumei SHA ; Bin QIN ; Tao WU ; Xin LIU
Chinese Journal of Inflammatory Bowel Diseases 2024;08(2):181-183
Idiopathic myointimal hyperplasia of the mesenteric veins (IMHMV) is often misdiagnosed as inflammatory bowel disease due to the similarity of clinical symptoms and endoscopic presentation. This paper reports a female patient who was misdiagnosed as Crohn′s disease with poor treatment outcome and later treated with surgical resection. The diagnosis was confirmed by postoperative pathology to be IMHMV of the cecum, with a view to improve the awareness of the disease and reduce misdiagnosis and mistreatment.
4.A case of idiopathic myointimal hyperplasia of the mesenteric veins of the cecum
Kairong SU ; Haitao SHI ; Jie WU ; Sumei SHA ; Bin QIN ; Tao WU ; Xin LIU
Chinese Journal of Inflammatory Bowel Diseases 2024;08(2):181-183
Idiopathic myointimal hyperplasia of the mesenteric veins (IMHMV) is often misdiagnosed as inflammatory bowel disease due to the similarity of clinical symptoms and endoscopic presentation. This paper reports a female patient who was misdiagnosed as Crohn′s disease with poor treatment outcome and later treated with surgical resection. The diagnosis was confirmed by postoperative pathology to be IMHMV of the cecum, with a view to improve the awareness of the disease and reduce misdiagnosis and mistreatment.
5.Prevalence and influencing factors of post-stroke depression among middle aged and elderly stroke patients in Mongolia and Han nationality
Na GAO ; Tian LAN ; Yan SHE ; Hu Bao Li Ge ; Qi Le Mu Ge ; Go Ri SU ; Kairong HUANG ; Xuefei YAO ; Hu Ri Le Te Mu Er
Chinese Journal of Behavioral Medicine and Brain Science 2018;27(4):366-371
Objective To explore the prevalence and analyze the related risk factors for post-stroke depression among middle-aged and elderly stroke patients of Mongolia and Han nationality in Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region.Methods A stratified multistage random cluster sampling method was used to investigate the prevalence of stroke in the population aged ≥45 years in different areas of Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region.A total of 11 088 people were investigated and 498 were stroke patients among them.A set of scale assessment and the general situation were used to investigate stroke patients and 443 patients completed the whole survey.Results The total prevalence of post-stroke depression (PSD) was 41.08% in 443 stroke patients,among which the prevalence rate was 40.57% for Mongolian population and 41.85% for Han population,and no significant difference was found between Mongolian and Han nationality(x2=1.372,P=0.504).There were significant differences in the types of stroke between the Mongolian and Han nationality (x2 =7.347,P=0.025).The age (t=4.321,P=0.000),educational level (x2 =27.036,P=0.001) and economic burden (x2=27.877,P=0.000) were statistically significant between Mongolian and Han nationality.The differences of frequency of stroke (x2 =6.545,P=0.011),economic burden (x2 =16.148,P=0.001),cognitive dysfunction (x2 =9.065,P=0.003),daily living ability (x2 =34.466,P =0.000),alcohol consumption history(x2=4.516,P=0.034)were statistically significant.Logistic regression analysis showed that alcohol consumption history,economic burden,the frequency of stroke,and cognitive dysfunction were the influencing factors of PSD.Conclusion PSD is one of the important factors affecting the post-stroke psychological burden in Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region.There is no national difference in the prevalence of PSD among Mongolian and Han people,which provides a theoretical basis for the treatment and intervention of PSD.

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