Division of Gastroenterology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21287, United States.
Medical Affairs, AbbVie Inc., North Chicago, IL 60064, United States.
World J Gastroenterol. 2017 Oct 21;23(39):7059-7076. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v23.i39.7059.
Exocrine pancreatic insufficiency (EPI), an important cause of maldigestion and malabsorption, results from primary pancreatic diseases or secondarily impaired exocrine pancreatic function. Besides cystic fibrosis and chronic pancreatitis, the most common etiologies of EPI, other causes of EPI include unresectable pancreatic cancer, metabolic diseases (diabetes); impaired hormonal stimulation of exocrine pancreatic secretion by cholecystokinin (CCK); celiac or inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) due to loss of intestinal brush border proteins; and gastrointestinal surgery (asynchrony between motor and secretory functions, impaired enteropancreatic feedback, and inadequate mixing of pancreatic secretions with food). This paper reviews such conditions that have less straightforward associations with EPI and examines the role of pancreatic enzyme replacement therapy (PERT). Relevant literature was identified by database searches. Most patients with inoperable pancreatic cancer develop EPI (66%-92%). EPI occurs in patients with type 1 (26%-57%) or type 2 diabetes (20%-36%) and is typically mild to moderate; by definition, all patients with type 3c (pancreatogenic) diabetes have EPI. EPI occurs in untreated celiac disease (4%-80%), but typically resolves on a gluten-free diet. EPI manifests in patients with IBD (14%-74%) and up to 100% of gastrointestinal surgery patients (47%-100%; dependent on surgical site). With the paucity of published studies on PERT use for these conditions, recommendations for or against PERT use remain ambiguous. The authors conclude that there is an urgent need to conduct robust clinical studies to understand the validity and nature of associations between EPI and medical conditions beyond those with proven mechanisms, and examine the potential role for PERT.
外分泌胰腺功能不全(EPI)是一种重要的消化不良和吸收不良的原因,它是由原发性胰腺疾病或继发的外分泌胰腺功能障碍引起的。除囊性纤维化和慢性胰腺炎外,EPI 的最常见病因还包括不可切除的胰腺癌、代谢疾病(糖尿病);胆囊收缩素(CCK)对胰外分泌刺激的激素作用受损;乳糜泻或炎症性肠病(IBD)导致肠刷状缘蛋白丢失;以及胃肠手术(运动和分泌功能不同步、肠胰反馈受损、胰液与食物混合不足)。本文综述了与 EPI 关系不太直接的这些情况,并研究了胰酶替代治疗(PERT)的作用。通过数据库搜索确定了相关文献。大多数不可切除的胰腺癌患者会发生 EPI(66%-92%)。1 型(26%-57%)或 2 型糖尿病(20%-36%)患者会发生 EPI,且通常为轻至中度;根据定义,所有 3c 型(胰源性)糖尿病患者都有 EPI。未经治疗的乳糜泻(4%-80%)患者会发生 EPI,但通常在无麸质饮食后可缓解。IBD(14%-74%)患者会发生 EPI,且高达 100%的胃肠手术患者(47%-100%;取决于手术部位)会发生 EPI。由于缺乏关于这些疾病使用 PERT 的已发表研究,因此关于使用或不使用 PERT 的建议仍然不明确。作者得出结论,迫切需要开展强有力的临床研究,以了解 EPI 与除那些具有明确机制的疾病之外的其他疾病之间关联的有效性和性质,并研究 PERT 的潜在作用。