Measurement of feline-specific pancreatic lipase aids in the diagnosis of pancreatitis in cats

Author:

Forman Marnin A.1,Robertson Jane E.2,Shiroma Jonathan T.3,Hostutler Roger A.3,Simpson Kenneth W.4,Estrin Michael,Newman Shelley J.5,Corn Stephanie C.,Buch Jesse6,Armstrong P. Jane7

Affiliation:

1. Cornell University Veterinary Specialists, Stamford, CT

2. Idexx Laboratories Inc, West Sacramento, CA

3. MedVet, Medical and Cancer Center for Pets, Worthington, OH

4. Department of Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY

5. Newman Specialty VetPath, Hicksville, NY

6. Idexx Laboratories Inc, Westbrook, ME

7. Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Minnesota, Saint Paul, MN

Abstract

Abstract OBJECTIVE To establish a reference interval for a feline-specific pancreatic lipase assay (Spec fPL test; Idexx Laboratories Inc) in healthy cats and determine the sensitivity and specificity of the Spec fPL test in a large group of ill cats with and without pancreatitis. ANIMALS 41 healthy cats, 141 cats with clinical signs consistent with pancreatitis, and 786 stored sera with known feline pancreatic lipase immunoreactivity (fPLI) concentrations. METHODS This was a prospective, cross-sectional, nonrandomized study. Based on a detailed review of the medical history and results of physical examination, CBC, serum biochemical profile, urinalysis, abdominal ultrasonography, and clinical outcome, each cat was categorized by 2 board-certified internists masked to the fPLI test results into 1 of 6 categories from definitely pancreatitis to definitely not pancreatitis. RESULTS The reference interval for the Spec fPL test, determined from the central 95th percentile of results from healthy cats, was fPLI of 0.7 to 3.5 µg/L. An fPLI concentration of ≥ 5.4 µg/L was determined to be consistent with pancreatitis. With an fPLI of 5.4 µg/L as the diagnostic cutoff, the sensitivity of the Spec fPL test for feline pancreatitis (definitely pancreatitis and probably pancreatitis) was 79.4%, the specificity for cats characterized as probably not pancreatitis and definitely not pancreatitis was 79.7%, and positive and negative predictive values were 69% and 87%, respectively. CLINICAL RELEVANCE These findings support the use of the Spec fPL test as a valuable diagnostic test for feline pancreatitis.

Publisher

American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA)

Subject

General Veterinary

Reference50 articles.

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3. Serum and urine concentrations of trypsinogen-activation peptide as markers for acute pancreatitis in cats;Allen HS,2006

4. Pancreatitis in cats: is it acute, is it chronic, is it significant?;Bazelle J,2014

5. Pancreatic surgical biopsy in 24 dogs and 19 cats: postoperative complications and clinical relevance of histological findings;Pratschke KM,2015

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