Utility of surrogate markers for the prediction of relapses in inflammatory bowel diseases.
Jason Orlando Dimitri MusciJack Stephen CornishJan DäbritzPublished in: Journal of gastroenterology (2016)
Patients with diagnosed inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) will commonly experience a clinical relapse in spite of a prolonged therapy-induced period of clinical remission. The current methods of assessing subclinical levels of low-grade inflammation which predispose patients to relapse are not optimal when considering both cost and patient comfort. Over the past few decades, much investigation has discovered that proteins such as calprotectin that are released from inflammatory cells are capable of indicating disease activity. Along with C-reactive protein and erythrocyte sedimentation rate, calprotectin has now become part of the current methodology for assessing IBD activity. More recently, research has identified that other fecal and serum biomarkers such as lactoferrin, S100A12, GM-CSF autoantibodies, α1-antitrypsin, eosinophil-derived proteins, and cytokine concentrations have variable degrees of utility in monitoring gastrointestinal tract inflammation. In order to provide direction toward novel methods of predicting relapse in IBD, we provide an up-to-date review of these biomarkers and their potential utility in the prediction of clinical relapse, given their observed activities during various stages of clinical remission.
Keyphrases
- disease activity
- systemic lupus erythematosus
- low grade
- rheumatoid arthritis
- oxidative stress
- ulcerative colitis
- rheumatoid arthritis patients
- free survival
- high grade
- end stage renal disease
- stem cells
- chronic kidney disease
- induced apoptosis
- ejection fraction
- mesenchymal stem cells
- bone marrow
- juvenile idiopathic arthritis
- prognostic factors
- drug induced
- high glucose
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cell therapy
- smoking cessation
- cerebrospinal fluid