A Diagnostic Accuracy Study Testing Fecal Biomarkers In Comparison To Endoscopic Examination
Inflammatory Bowel DiseasesIn this study it will be explored whether the levels of fecal biomarkers are associated with histologic inflammation of the intestinal mucosa and concomitant alteration of the mucosal permeability. The aim of the study is to assess the diagnostic accuracy of fecal biomarkers especially to detect the potential of differentiation between inflammatory and functional gastrointestinal diseases. The following biomarkers will be examined in the stool of the participants: calprotectin, lactoferrin, pmn-elastase, human beta-defensin, zonulin, alpha-antitrypsin.
Mechanism of Chronic Pain in Patients With IBD
Inflammatory Bowel DiseasesAbdominal pain is a common symptom in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Up to 70 % of IBD patients experience pain when the disease is active. Even when patients with IBD are in remission, 20-50 % experience ongoing pain. The precise mechanism of developing chronic abdominal pain in patients with IBD in remission remains unknown. The aim of this study is to identify psychophysiological and biological risk factors for the development of chronic abdominal pain in patients with newly diagnosed IBD (ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease). This study consists of 4 sections (Study 1A, 1B, 2, and 3): Study 1A: We perform a longitudinal study in 150 patients with new-onset IBD over 18 months to identify risk factors related to the brain-gut axis for the development of chronic pain. This is a collaborative study with IBD BioResourse Inception study. We administer online questionnaires, collect stool and blood samples, and record heart rate. Other physiological data collected by the Inception study will be also used for the analysis. Study 1B: This is also a collaborative study with the Inception study. We will apply for our detailed questionnaires for 7 days (as per study 1A) to be administered to all the new patients (n=450) that are included in the Inception study on a voluntary basis. Patients will be followed for 12 months. Study 2 and 3: Study 2 and 3 are a questionnaire-based cross-sectional study in patients with IBD. The participants for study 2 are patients registered in IBD BOOST study and those for study 3 are patients registered in IBD BioResource (but not in IBD Boost study). Detailed online questionnaires will be administered to them. These studies are just one-day assessment.
EFFICACY AND SAFETY OF S.C. INFLIXIMAB IN PATIENTS SWITCHED FROM I.V. FORMULATION OF INFLIXIMAB...
Inflammatory Bowel DiseasesRheumatologic DiseasePhase-IV, national, multicentric, non-randomized, observational real-life study. The goal of this stud is to investigate the patient's benefits in terms of quality of life and work ability resulting from the switch from infliximab i.v. to s.c. in patients with gastroenterological or rheumatological indication at month 12.Patients who are eligible but were switched before the inclusion in this study will also be enrolled, and the data already collected according to clinical practice and consistent with the study outcome measures will be used retrospectively. All patients will be followed up according to the standard of care of each participating center. The main questions it aims to answer are: To investigate the effectiveness at month 2, 6 and 12 after switching to infliximab s.c. To investigate the safety profile at month 2, 6 and 12 after switching to infliximab s.c. To investigate the difference between patients with rheumatological diseases and patients with IBD in terms of quality of life and work, effectiveness and safety at month 2, 6 and 12 after switching. To investigate the presence of baseline predictors for drug persistence at month 12 (sex, age, disease type, disease severity, body mass index, concomitant medications, smoking habit, presence of comorbidities). To investigate whether there is any change between baseline and week 52 in the following aspects: Job type and need for any authorization to go to the hospital to receive the study drug Distance and duration of the travel home-hospital Mode of travel home-hospital Need for a caregiver to be present Time spent at hospital Patient's preference for the way of study drug administration expressed on a 10-grades VAS scale. The study period for observation will be 12 months from the date of switch. At week 0, month 2, 6 and 12 from the date of the switch, clinical activity, safety data and biomarker levels will be collected. For those patients who have had an endoscopic evaluation of the disease within 2 months of inclusion and repeat the endoscopic evaluation at 12 months ± 8 weeks, endoscopic data will also be collected (valid only in the presence of IBD). In those centers where a blood sample to analyze the minimum levels and anti-drug antibodies of infliximab has been collected and/or stored within 2 months prior to the date of transition, the patient will be asked to give informed consent to the use of this sample and to provide a blood sample for the same analysis at week 0, month 2 and 12. These samples will be analyzed and compared to evaluate the immunogenicity of the drug. These analyzes will be centralized in one lab.
Brain Activity and Oxygenation Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) Patients
IBDMaladaptive Behavior Associated With Physical IllnessSymptoms such as fatigue, sleep disturbances, anxiety and depression are common in patients with IBD, but the cause is unknown. Understanding how these behaviors occur in IBD and their role in symptoms may help improve management of IBD. How IBD leads to changes in brain function remains unclear. Inflammation and dysfunction of blood flow may occur in patients with IBD, which may be linked to these symptoms. Patients with IBD also have an alteration or imbalance of gut bacteria which may play a role in the development of the disease, but the exact mechanism remains poorly understood;as a result, there are limited therapeutic options available clinically to address this issue. An approved therapy, anti-TNF α, may be useful in improving brain and gut activity as well as quality of life. The purpose of this research study is to better understand brain and gut activity in the context of IBD to possibly improve treatments for the disease. In patients taking anti-TNFα therapy as prescribed clinically as standard of care, the investigators will measure brain activity using NIRS; gut microbiome using stool analysis and quality of life using various questionnaires.
Mitochondrial DAMPs as Mechanistic Biomarkers of Mucosal Inflammation in Crohn's Disease and Ulcerative...
Inflammatory Bowel DiseasesThe MUSIC study is a multi-centre, longitudinal study set in the real world IBD clinical setting to investigate and develop a new biomarker approach that aims to inform both patients and clinicians of the current state of the affected gut lining (how inflamed or whether the bowel wall has completely healed). This new biomarker approach will study a panel of molecular signs in IBD patients' blood, stools and biopsies that will be correlated to the current gold standard of direct gut visual examination using ileo-colonoscopy and flexible sigmoidoscopy tests (a fibre-optic examination of the lower small bowel and large bowel). Here, the state and appearances of IBD patients' gut lining will be assessed over one year in response to treatment given to them by their NHS IBD consultant. This approach will focus on the role of damage associated molecular patterns (DAMPs), also known as 'danger signals'. DAMPs are found in our own cells and are released during tissue stress or injury. Like signals from bacteria, they can trigger inflammation. In the MUSIC study, blood, stool, saliva and gut samples obtained from participants during active IBD and in clinical remission will be used in order to understand how DAMPs contribute to the development of gut inflammation.
A Study of Kynteles Injection (Vedolizumab) in Adults With Moderate to Severe Ulcerative Colitis...
Inflammatory Bowel DiseasesColitis2 moreIn this study, participants with ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease or pouchitis will be treated with Kynteles injection (Vedolizumab) according to their clinic's standard practice. The main aim of the study is to check for side effects from treatment with Kynteles injection (Vedolizumab). Another aim is to learn how many participants have improved symptoms after treatment with Kynteles injection (Vedolizumab).
OptiMized REsistaNt Starch in Inflammatory Bowel Disease: The MEND Trial
Crohn DiseaseUlcerative Colitis1 moreThe purpose of the study is to determine if a plant-based resistant starch that is optimized for the individual will target the underlying cause of inflammatory bowel disease and restore a "healthier" gut microbiome in pediatric participants with inflammatory bowel disease.
Based on the Special Disease Management of Crohn's Disease Diet Studies
Inflammatory Bowel DiseasesThis project plans to develop a new diet therapy suitable for China -- CD-C-food, which is more in line with the common diet of Chinese patients' eating habits and economic conditions, and its expected therapeutic effect and influence on intestinal microorganism are similar to that of EEN. In order to explore the influence of intestinal microorganisms and their metabolites on the clinical remission effect and inflammatory response of patients with CD-C-Food, and to reveal the possible internal mechanism, a randomized control of adult subjects with a healthy CD-Chinese-food diet, treatment group of CD patients and animal model will be conducted by using intestinal microbiome, bacterial metabolite analysis, inflammatory factors detection and other technical means.
A Systems Biology Approach for Identification of Host and Microbial Mechanisms and Druggable Targets...
Inflammatory Bowel DiseasesPrimary Sclerosing CholangitisPrimary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) is the classical hepatobiliary manifestation of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Although rare, PSC is associated with significant and disproportionate unmet needs; with heightened risks of colorectal cancer and colectomy, and greater all-cause mortality rates compared to matched IBD patients. Unfortunately, no medical therapy has been proven to slow disease progression in PSC-IBD, and liver transplantation is the only lifesaving intervention for patients. The strong association between PSC and IBD has led to several pathogenic hypotheses, in which dysregulated mucosal immune responses are proposed to contribute. Of note, the investigators recently identified distinct mucosal transcriptomic profiles in PSC-IBD; with regards bile acid metabolism, bile acid signalling, and a central role of enteric dysbiosis. In parallel, pilot data from other groups have shown that treatment with oral vancomycin (a non-absorbable, gut-specific antibiotic) attenuates colonic inflammation and improves biochemical markers of cholestasis in PSC. However, there is no mechanistic data exploring the host-microbial alterations under vancomycin treatment in PSC-IBD, neither the impact of vancomycin on bile acid circulation. The investigators of this study hypothesize that oral vancomycin attenuates colonic mucosal inflammation in PSC-IBD, by restoring gut microbiota mediated bile acid homeostatic pathways. Through these means the study aims to identify druggable gut microbial and host molecular pathways associated with bile acid mediated colonic mucosal inflammation in PSC-IBD.
Preclinical Evaluation of Multimodal Therapeutic Strategies in Intestinal Irradiation and Inflammatory...
Radiation EnteritisInflammatory Bowel DiseasesThis study is carried out in patients with IBD and healthy subjects requiring ileocolonoscopy as part of routine care (disease monitoring or polyp/colon cancer screening). It aims the generation and culturing of organoids from digestive biopsies recovered from healthy and/or pathological (inflammatory) ileal and/or colonic mucosa during an ileo-colonoscopy. These cultures will make it possible to validate the organoid production method used in the context of the research (primary objective). In a second phase (secondary objectives), the study will aim to setup a screening tool by irradiating the organoids (step one) and then evaluate in vitro the regenerative activity of treatments dedicated to improve inflammatory bowel diseases and acute radiation enteritis (step two).