Background: Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is diagnosed after the development of feeding intolerance and characteristic physical and imaging findings. Earlier detection of a subclinical prodrome might allow for the institution of measures that could prevent or attenuate the severity of the disease.
Objectives: We sought to determine whether urinary intestinal fatty acid-binding protein (iFABPu) might be elevated prior to the first clinical manifestations of NEC.
Methods: Urine was collected daily from 62 infants of a gestational age of 24-28 weeks. Based on clinical, imaging and operative findings, subjects were determined to have Bell stage 2 or 3 NEC. In all the subjects with NEC and in 21 age-matched controls, iFABPu was determined using an ELISA, and was expressed in terms of its ratio to urinary creatinine (Cr), i.e. iFABPu/Cru. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were constructed to define the predictive value of iFABPu/Cru for impending NEC in the days prior to the first clinical manifestations.
Results: Five subjects developed NEC (stage 2: n = 3 and stage 3: n = 2). The day before the first clinical manifestation of NEC, a ROC curve showed that an iFABPu/Cru >10.2 pg/nmol predicted impending NEC with a sensitivity of 100% and a specificity of 95.6%. iFABPu/Cru did not predict NEC 2 days prior to the first sign of disease.
Conclusions: An elevated iFABPu was a sensitive and specific predictor of impending NEC 1 day prior to the first clinical manifestations. iFABPu screening might identify infants at a high risk and allow for the institution of measures that could ameliorate or prevent NEC.
© 2014 S. Karger AG, Basel.