A Specific Calprotectin Neo-epitope [CPa9-HNE] in Serum from Inflammatory Bowel Disease Patients Is Associated with Neutrophil Activity and Endoscopic Severity
Joachim Høg Mortensen, Dovilė Sinkevičiūtė, Tina Manon‐Jensen, Viktor Domislović, Kathryn McCall, Christian S. Thudium, Marko Brinar, Patrik Önnerfjord, Carl S. Goodyear, Željko Krznarić, M.A. Karsdal, Anne‐Christine Bay‐Jensen
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Endoscopy and the use of faecal calprotectin [faecal CP] are among the least-favoured methods for assessing disease activity by inflammatory bowel disease [IBD] patients; the handling/processing of faecal samples is also impractical. Therefore, we sought to develop a novel neo-epitope serum calprotectin enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay [ELISA], CPa9-HNE, with the aim of quantifying neutrophil activity and neutrophil extracellular trap [NET]-osis and proposing a non-invasive method for monitoring disease activity in IBD patients. METHODS: In vitro cleavage was performed by mixing calprotectin [S100A9/S100A8] with human neutrophil elastase [HNE], and a novel HNE-derived calprotectin neo-epitope [CPa9-HNE] was identified by mass spectrometry for ELISA development. The CPa9-HNE ELISA was quantified in supernatants from ex vivo activated neutrophils and serum samples from patients with ulcerative colitis [UC, n = 43], Crohn's disease [CD, n = 93], and healthy subjects [HS, n = 23]. For comparison, faecal CP and MRP8/14 biomarkers were also measured. RESULTS: CPa9-HNE was specific for activated neutrophils ex vivo. Serum CPa9-HNE levels were 4-fold higher in CD [p <0.0001] and UC [p <0.0001] patients than in HS. CPa9-HNE correlated well with the Simple Endoscopic Score [SES]-CD score [r = 0.61, p <0.0001], MES [r = 0.46, p = 0.0141], and the full Mayo score [r = 0.52, p = 0.0013]. CPa9-HNE was able to differentiate between CD and UC patients in endoscopic remission and moderate/severe disease activity (CD: area under the curve [AUC] = 0.82 [p = 0.0003], UC: AUC = 0.87 [p = 0.0004]). The performance of CPa9-HNE was equipotent or slightly better than that of faecal CP. CONCLUSIONS: Serum CPa9-HNE levels were highly associated with CD and UC patients. CPa9-HNE correlated with the SES-CD score and the full Mayo score, indicating a strong association with disease activity.