학술논문

Diagnosing lactase deficiency in three breaths.
Document Type
Article
Source
European Journal of Clinical Nutrition. May2011, Vol. 65 Issue 5, p614-618. 5p. 1 Chart, 2 Graphs.
Subject
*BREATH tests
*LACTOSE intolerance
*STATISTICAL sampling
*SENSITIVITY analysis
*INFANT diseases
*SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics)
*LOGICAL prediction
*DIAGNOSIS
Language
ISSN
0954-3007
Abstract
Background:Lactose hydrogen breath tests (H2-BTs) are widely used to diagnose lactase deficiency, the most common cause of lactose intolerance. The main time-consuming part of the test relates to the sampling frequency and number of breath samples.Aim:Evaluate sensitivities and specificities of two- and three-sample breath tests compared with standard breath sampling every 15 min.Methods:Lactose H2-BT with probes samples every 15 min served as gold standard. Sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive value of two-sample tests (0-60 min, 0-90 min or 0-120 min) and three-sample tests (0-60-90 min, 0-60-120 min or 0-90-120 min) were calculated.Results:Among 1049 lactose H2-BT performed between July 1999 and December 2005, 337 (32%) had a positive result. Two-sample tests had sensitivity and specificity of 52.5 and 100.0% (0-60 min), 81.9 and 99.7% (0-90 min), and 92.6 and 99.2% (0-120 min), respectively. Three-sample tests had sensitivity and specificity of 83.4 and 99.7% (0-60-90 min), 95.0 and 99.2% (0-60-120 min), and 95.0 and 98.9% (0-90-120 min), respectively.Conclusion:A three-sample breath test (baseline, 60/90 min and 120 min) has excellent sensitivity and specificity for lactase deficiency. Lactose H2-BT can be simplified but not shortened to <2 h. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]