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This study aims to test the overall hypothesis that the membrane tissue binding capacity of cytokines in the biopsied tissue of patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) is predictive of/strongly correlated to clinical response/outcomes observed.
The key questions under investigation are:
Aim 1: To assess the fluorescent signal intensity at baseline (control antibody with control biopsy and control antibody with IBD biopsy).
Aim 2: To characterize the cellular landscape by surveying surface markers using bar-coded antibodies and performing gene expression profiling on every cell within inflamed tissue of patients with IBD.
Aim 3: Develop algorithm using artificial intelligence to predict responders versus non-responders and to further subclassify IBD patients using phenotype data.
Full description
It is estimated that approximately 5-10% of IBD patients develop the disease during childhood or adolescence. The disease onset peaks in adolescence, while 4% of children with IBD are less than 5 years of age and 18% below 10 years of age. IBD is characterized by a prolonged course of remission and relapse.
In patients with suspected IBD, endoscopy with biopsy is the gold standard method to diagnose and assess the degree and extent of inflammation. The impairment of intact intestinal epithelial barrier function is the hallmark of IBD, further involving a cascade of molecular and cellular alterations leading to delayed mucosal wound healing.
In the past decade, several studies examined the utility of probe-based confocal laser endomicroscopy (CLE) in several diseases, including IBD. The CLE is an emerging endoscopic technology developed to obtain high magnification and high-resolution images known as "optical" biopsies of the gastrointestinal mucosal histology in real-time at the cellular and sub-cellular levels.
The advantage of CLE during endoscopy is that normal tissue can be identified in real-time with high precision. A semi-quantitative test known as the Watson score was described by to describe structural and functional barrier defects in the terminal ileum in inflammatory bowel disease using CLE.
Although the use of biologics has revolutionized the management of IBD, it is estimated that approximately 10-40% of patients with IBD on biological agents like anti-TNF such as Infliximab (IFX) are primary non-responders, with an additional 13% per patient year experiencing a secondary loss of response. In children with moderate to severe Crohn's disease, it was estimated that only 67% would continue maintenance infliximab after three-years and approximately 50% of pediatric patients on IFX require dose intensification during maintenance therapy.
Limited studies have explored the binding of fluorescent labeled biologics ex-vivo using CLE in adults with little to no published literature in children. Studies in Europe have demonstrated that greater the binding of the biologic agent to the biopsied tissue pre-treatment, was associated with increased response to treatment, which was more pronounced in Ulcerative Colitis (AUROC 83%, PPV 89%, NPV 50%). A study abstract reported to have assessed the presence of fluorescein isothicyanate (FITC) labeled Vedolizumab (VDZ) prior to initiation of VDZ therapy in five patients with Crohn's Disease refractory to anti-TNF therapy. Among the 5, two of them showed α4β7 expressing mucosal cells and were found to have a good response to subsequent treatment with VDZ. However, further details of the study were not available. Similarly, a sustained improved response to anti-TNF treatment among patients with Crohn's Disease with high membrane-bound tumor necrosis factor (mTNF) intestinal immune cells using CLE evidenced by mucosal healing was observed on follow-up endoscopy compared to those who had low mTNF levels.
We sought to pursue the proposed study for the following reasons:
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40 participants in 1 patient group
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Sumith Roy, MBBS, MPH; Chief Research Officer
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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