Introduction
C-reactive protein (CRP) is an acute phase protein (APP), a term that describes proteins whose concentration changes in response to inflammation or immune system stimulation, regardless of the cause. CRP is generated quickly, with significant increases observed just a few hours after the inflammatory stimulus (e.g., 4 hours after a surgical intervention), and peak concentrations are reached at approximately 24 hours. This reaction is part of the innate immune response, which means that it is rapid and non-specific, and it can be triggered by any process that damages the animal 1. After more than 20 years of using and providing external services for CRP measurement at our laboratory, we have found that practitioners who regularly use CRP consider it to be one of the most important biomarkers of inflammation. Included as a part of their routine analytical profiles, CRP assay is employed for periodic check-ups, diagnostics, treatment monitoring, and predicting the outcome of inflammatory disease. This review will provide updated information and practical examples on how CRP can be employed in clinical practice, and will follow the initial consensus based on a seven-point plan established some years ago about the use of CRP in companion animals 1.
Always use a validated assay
Any method used to assess CRP in practice must be validated to ensure the results can be trusted. Various manufacturers currently offer certified in-house (“benchtop”) canine-specific tests, and the larger clinical pathology laboratories also provide assays. Although certain human assays may not be suitable for dogs, others can be effective and provide a cost-efficient means of measuring CRP 2. However, it is always to be recommended that standardization of the assay (using purified protein or pools of acute phase serum) and control samples should be of canine origin.
Serum, EDTA or heparinized plasma can be employed for CRP measurements, and because the protein is fairly stable, samples can be refrigerated for several days or frozen for long-term preservation. It is important to know the effect of hemolysis, lipemia and bilirubinemia on the CRP values obtained, as the effects can vary depending on the method used. In our laboratory, the reference range for CRP in healthy dogs is below 12 mg/L, and whilst this value can vary between laboratories, it is usually not higher than 20 mg/L. There are no evident changes in reference ranges due to age or gender, although in pregnant bitches CRP increases at 21 days after fertilization, coinciding with embryonic implantation.
Other APPs can be used alongside CRP
The possibility of using CRP along with other APPs will be considered later, but the different APPs will be described here. APPs that increase concentration after an inflammatory stimulus are known as POSITIVE APPs, while others that decrease after such a stimulus are called NEGATIVE APPs (Figure 1).
Positive APPs are further classified into two groups, namely major and moderate: Major APPs in dogs are CRP and serum amyloid A (SAA). While these proteins are present in low level in healthy animals, their concentration can increase by 10-100 times when stimulated. Moderate APPs are haptoglobin (Hp), ferritin and fibrinogen. Their concentrations increase 2-10-fold following stimulation. Major APPs exhibit a rapid increase in concentration followed by a steep decline, usually within hours, while moderate APPs take longer to both increase from and return to normal levels.
Albumin and paraoxonase-1 (PON-1) are examples of negative APPs. During inflammation, the albumin serum concentration decreases. This may be because albumin is the most abundant protein in serum, and its decrease can promote the synthesis of other proteins related to inflammation. PON-1 has an antioxidant function, and its decrease in inflammatory processes is possibly due to the associated oxidative stress that consumes this protein.