Journal article

Vitamin D3 in patients with various grades of chronic pancreatitis, according to morphological and functional criteria of the pancreas


Authors listMann, STW; Stracke, H; Lange, U; Klör, HU; Teichmann, J

Publication year2003

Pages533-538

JournalDigestive Diseases and Sciences

Volume number48

Issue number3

ISSN0163-2116

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1023/A:1022540816990

PublisherSpringer


Abstract
There are still too few conclusive reports about conspicuous vitamin D deficiency in patients with chronic pancreatitis, or any connection of the deficiency to the severity of the disease. Between October 1999 and September 2000, we investigated 42 patients at an average age of 53 years, suffering from chronic pancreatits, as well as 20 healthy male controls at an average age of 49 years. Serum levels of D-3 vitamins, 1,25-( OH)(2)- vitamin D-3 and 25-(OH)- vitamin D-3, as well as the concentration of fecal elastase 1 were determined in patients and controls. Furthermore, the severity of chronic pancreatitis in patients was determined via endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) into 3 grades, based on the Cambridge classification. Elastase 1 in feces revealed sensitivities of 14%, 87%, and 95% for Cambridge- grades I, II, and III, respectively, and correlated significantly with this classification of severity of chronic pancreatitis ( P < 0:01). In patients with Cambridge- grade II and III 1,25-( OH)(2)-D-3 was markedly decreased (26:7 +/- 7:7 pg/ ml and 27:6 +/- 9:0 pg/ ml) compared to those with Cambridge- grade I (38:0 +/- 10:5 pg/ ml; between I and II P = 0:027, between I and III P = 0:033). 25-(OH)-D-(3) did not differ significantly within the various Cambridge- grade groups ( P = 0:07). Nevertheless, vitamin D-3 and fecal elastase 1 in patients correlated significantly ( P < 0:01) and, compared to controls, both were extremely low (means in patients: fecal elastase 1 140:7 +/- 75:7 mug/ g, 1,25-(OH)(2)-D-3 29:9 +/- 9:5 pg/ ml, 25-(OH)-D-3 26:7 +/- 9:7 nmol/ liter; controls: fecal elastase 1 694:9 +/- 138:6 mug/ g, 1,25-(OH)(2)-D-3 67:5 +/- 4:3 pg/ ml, 25-(OH)-D-3 69:5 +/- 13:5 nmol/ liter). The amounts of both D-3 vitamins in patients were significantly lower when the content of fecal elastase 1 was under 200 mug/ g compared to the others [for 1,25-(OH)(2)-D-3 P < 0:01, for 25-(OH)- D-3 P < 0:05]. Therefore, ERCP and fecal elastase 1 verify the severity grade of a chronic pancreatitis, and thus show a vitamin D3 deficiency, depending on the progress of the disease. There seems to be a connection between inflammatory pancreas destruction (Cambridge classification), exocrine insufficiency (fecal elastase 1), and perhaps even the characteristics of sterol- binding of pancreatic elastase 1, which seems to be relevant for vitamin D supply.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleMann, S., Stracke, H., Lange, U., Klör, H. and Teichmann, J. (2003) Vitamin D3 in patients with various grades of chronic pancreatitis, according to morphological and functional criteria of the pancreas, Digestive Diseases and Sciences, 48(3), pp. 533-538. https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1022540816990

APA Citation styleMann, S., Stracke, H., Lange, U., Klör, H., & Teichmann, J. (2003). Vitamin D3 in patients with various grades of chronic pancreatitis, according to morphological and functional criteria of the pancreas. Digestive Diseases and Sciences. 48(3), 533-538. https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1022540816990



Keywords


BONE-MINERAL DENSITYCambridge classificationERCPexocrine pancreatic insufficiencyFAT-SOLUBLE VITAMINSfecal elastase 1FECAL ELASTASE TESTINSUFFICIENCYvitamin D-3

Last updated on 2025-02-04 at 07:20