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Gut

Publication date: 1998-01-01
Volume: 43 Pages: 408 - 411
Publisher: British Medical Association

Author:

De Boeck, Christiane
Delbeke, I ; Eggermont, Ephrem ; Veereman, G ; Ghoos, I

Keywords:

Science & Technology, Life Sciences & Biomedicine, Gastroenterology & Hepatology, Nutrition & Dietetics, Pediatrics, breath test, cystic fibrosis, lipid digestion, pancreatic enzymes, pancreatic insufficiency, COLONOPATHY, Adolescent, Breath Tests, Caprylates, Carbon Isotopes, Child, Cystic Fibrosis, Dietary Fats, Digestion, Female, Gastric Emptying, Humans, Lipase, Male, Triglycerides, 1103 Clinical Sciences, 1114 Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine, 3202 Clinical sciences, 3210 Nutrition and dietetics

Abstract:

BACKGROUND: Fat maldigestion occurs in most patients with cystic fibrosis. Conventional pancreatic enzyme replacement therapy partially corrects this defect. In this study, the mixed-triglyceride breath test was used to evaluate whether high-lipase enzymes are equivalent to conventional enzymes in improving fat maldigestion in children with cystic fibrosis. METHODS: Fat digestion was studied in 11 patients with a mean age of 10.5 years. The mean intake of conventional enzyme capsules a day was 19. Four 13C mixed-triglyceride tests were performed on separate days and in random order. One test was taken without enzyme substitution, one with three capsules of 8,000 FIP units Creon (pancreatinum, Kali-chemie Pharma, Hannover, Germany) and one with one capsule of 25,000 FIP units. The fourth test was made with 13C octanoic acid to study gastric emptying time. RESULTS: Without enzyme intake, the mean cumulative percentage of 13C dose exhaled after 6 hours was 7.2+/-3.7%. This increased to 14.4+/-4% with intake of conventional pancreatinum and to 14.3+/-5.1% with intake of high-lipase pancreatinum (p = 0.0008 for both; paired t-test). There was no difference between both treatments. Also, the time course of 13C exhalation measured by percentage of 13CO2 exhaled per hour did not differ between enzyme treatments. CONCLUSIONS: The 13C mixed-triglyceride test is noninvasive and documents improved lipid digestion with pancreatic enzyme replacement therapy. If the lipase dose is kept constant, results obtained with high-lipase preparations are equivalent to those obtained with conventional preparations.