SI UNITS (recommended)

CONVENTIONAL UNITS

(Pancreatic Enzyme – Key Marker for Acute Pancreatitis & Pancreatic Injury)

Synonyms

  • Pancreatic lipase
  • Serum lipase
  • Triacylglycerol acylhydrolase
  • Lipolytic enzyme

Units of Measurement

  • nkat/L
  • µkat/L
  • nmol/(s·L)
  • µmol/(s·L)
  • U/L
  • IU/L
  • µmol/(min·L)
  • µmol/(h·L)
  • µmol/(h·mL)

Unit Relationships

1 katal (kat)
= 1 mol/sec of activity (SI unit)

1 kat = 10⁶ µkat = 10⁹ nkat
1 U (Unit) = 1 µmol/min = 16.67 nmol/sec
1 U/L ≈ 0.0167 µkat/L
1 U/L ≈ 16.7 nkat/L

(Lipase activity is measured in U/L in almost all clinical settings.)

Description

Lipase is a pancreatic enzyme responsible for:

  • Hydrolysis of dietary triglycerides → free fatty acids + glycerol

Serum lipase is:

  • Produced almost entirely by the pancreas
  • More specific for pancreatic injury than amylase
  • Elevated primarily in acute pancreatitis

Physiological Role

Lipase plays key roles in digestion:

  • Breaks down long-chain triglycerides
  • Works synergistically with bile acids
  • Secreted from pancreatic acinar cells

Clinical Significance

HIGH Lipase

1. Acute Pancreatitis

Lipase increases:

  • 3–6 hours after onset
  • Peaks at 24 hours
  • Remains elevated 7–14 days (longer than amylase)
  • 3× ULN is diagnostic

2. Chronic Pancreatitis

Mild to moderate elevation.

3. Pancreatic Cancer

Persistent elevation with other signs.

4. Cholecystitis / Gallstone Disease

Biliary pancreatitis.

5. Renal Failure

Reduced clearance → mild-to-moderate elevation.

6. Bowel Obstruction or Infarction

7. Alcoholic Pancreatitis

8. Drugs

  • GLP-1 agonists / DPP-4 inhibitors
  • Diuretics
  • Opiates
  • Valproate
  • Thiazides
  • Steroids

9. Trauma

Pancreatic injury.

LOW Lipase

Not usually clinically significant except in:

  • Cystic fibrosis
  • Chronic pancreatitis with exocrine insufficiency
  • Total pancreatectomy

Reference Intervals

(Method-dependent; typical values from Tietz 8E, Mayo & ARUP)

Adults

  • 13 – 60 U/L (typical)

Interpretation Thresholds

  • >3 × ULN (usually >180 U/L) → diagnostic of pancreatitis
  • >600–1000 U/L → severe pancreatitis likely
  • Normal lipase does NOT exclude pancreatitis in late presentation or hypertriglyceridemia

Children

  • Slightly higher in young infants
  • Approaches adult range after 1 year

(Each lab must validate method-specific ranges.)

Diagnostic Uses

1. Acute Pancreatitis

Lipase is the preferred test (more specific & longer elevation than amylase).

2. Chronic Pancreatitis

Elevated during flares.

3. Biliary Pancreatitis

Associated with gallstones, elevated LFTs.

4. Pancreatic Tumors

Persistent elevation.

5. Evaluation of Abdominal Pain

Differentiates pancreatic vs non-pancreatic causes.

6. Drug-Induced Pancreatitis

Elevated lipase is a key biochemical signal.

7. Renal Impairment

Interpreted cautiously (delayed clearance).

Analytical Notes

  • Serum or plasma acceptable
  • Avoid lipemic samples (interference)
  • No fasting required
  • Levels remain elevated longer than amylase
  • Ensure method-specific reference range reporting
  • Macro-lipasemia can cause persistent falsely high lipase

Clinical Pearls

  • Lipase is more sensitive and specific than amylase for pancreatitis.
  • Normal or mildly elevated lipase may occur early or very late in pancreatitis.
  • Hypertriglyceridemia can interfere with lipase activity assays.
  • Renal failure causes mild elevation (reduced clearance).
  • A lipase >1000 U/L is strongly suggestive of severe or biliary pancreatitis.

Interesting Fact

Lipase remains elevated for up to 2 weeks after pancreatitis onset-helping diagnose late-presenting cases where amylase has normalized.

References

  1. Tietz Clinical Chemistry & Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - Enzymes
  2. American College of Gastroenterology (ACG) - Acute Pancreatitis Guidelines
  3. AGA & ASGE Pancreatitis Guidelines
  4. Mayo Clinic Laboratories - Lipase
  5. ARUP Consult - Pancreatitis Testing
  6. MedlinePlus / NIH - Lipase Test

Last updated: January 26, 2026

Reviewed by : Medical Review Board

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