Detailed faecal bile acid profile: a diagnostic test for colorectal cancer?

1986 
: Detailed profiles of bile acids in faeces were evaluated as a diagnostic test for colorectal cancer in rats. Twenty-seven bile acid peaks were measured using improved methods of extraction and separation followed by the sensitive and specific techniques of capillary column gas liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry. Colorectal cancer was induced in experimental animals (female Sprague-Dawley rats, n = 20) by subcutaneous injection of dimethylhydrazine (DMH) and faecal unconjugated bile acids compared with those in the control group (n = 20). The amount of total faecal unconjugated bile acids was lower in the animals administered DMH (255 mg/day vs 334 mg/day: (P = 0.04), and the excretion of seven individual bile acids was reduced when compared with those in the control group (P less than 0.01). In order to use the faecal bile acid profiles as a diagnostic test, linear discriminant analysis was performed. A discriminant score was derived which was applied to each profile, to determine to which group (control or DMH) each animal belonged retrospectively. All analyses were performed blind, and 90% of the animals were correctly assigned. In man, as in rats, the bile acid profile of faces is equally complex and the bile acid profile may be useful as a diagnostic test.
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