Therapeutic Potential and Clinical Efficacy of Acid-Resistant Fungal Lipase in the Treatment of Pancreatic Steatorrhoea due to Cystic Fibrosis

Abstract
We investigated the therapeutic potential of an acid-resistant fungal lipase prepared from Aspergillus niger. We first demonstrated in vitro that it had a wide pH optimum of 2.5–5.5 and was resistant to pepsin and trypsin. We gave the enzyme or matching placebo in random order by mouth with a fatty meal to 10 adult patients with pancreatic steatorrhoea due to cystic fibrosis (CF) and sampled gastric contents for the following 2 h. Mean acid-resistant lipase activity was 330 nmol/ml/min free fatty acid released on placebo, compared with 896 nmol/ml/min on fungal lipase (p = 0.006 for area under the curve). We compared this lipase's clinical efficacy with that of two conventional pancreatin microsphere formulations in an open randomised crossover fat-balance study in 10 similar patients. Each preparation was given for 2 weeks, and a fat-balance study, using a faecal recovery marker, was performed on the final 3 days; a period without treatment was also included. The fungal lipase had no effect on faecal wet weight or on the coefficient of fat absorption (59.0% vs. 52.3%; NS) in comparison with placebo. The established enteric-coated microsphere preparation (Creon) produced a significant reduction in faecal wet weight and improvement in coefficient of fat absorption (81.4% vs. 52.3%; p

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