Auto-antibodies and their association with clinical findings in women diagnosed with microscopic colitis.
BACKGROUND:
Microscopic colitis (MC) is a disease manifested by diarrhoea and is divided into collagenous and lymphocytic colitis. The aetiology is unknown, but auto-immunity is suggested. Auto-antibodies have been only rarely examined in this entity. The aim of the study was to examine the prevalence of auto-antibodies, and to examine associations between the presence of antibodies and clinical findings.
METHODS AND FINDINGS:
Women with MC verified by biopsy and younger than 73 years, at any Department of Gastroenterology, in the district of Skåne, between 2002 and 2010 were invited to participate in this study. The patients were asked to complete both a questionnaire describing their medical history and the Gastrointestinal Symptom Rating Scale (GSRS). Blood samples were collected. Anti-nuclear antibodies (ANA), anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA), anti-Saccharomyces cerevisiae antibodies (ASCA), and antibodies against glutamic acid decarboxylase (anti-GAD), islet antigens-like insulin 2 (anti-IA2), thyroid peroxidase (anti-TPO), and thyrotropin receptor (TRAK) were analysed. Of 240 women identified, 133 were finally included in the study, median age 63 (59-67) years. Apart from the MC diagnosis, 52% also suffered from irritable bowel syndrome, 31% from hypertension and 31% from allergy. The prevalence of ANA (14%), ASCA IgG (13%), and anti-TPO antibodies (14%) for these patients was slightly higher than for the general population, and were found together with other concomitant diseases. Patients had more of all gastrointestinal symptoms compared with norm values, irrespective of antibody expression.
CONCLUSIONS:
Women with MC have a slightly increased prevalence of some auto-antibodies. These antibodies are not associated with symptoms, but are expressed in patients with concomitant diseases, obscuring the pathophysiology and clinical picture of MC.
Le coliti microscopiche sono malattie benigne e con gli opportuni accorgimenti terapeutici la maggior parte dei pazienti va incontro alla completa risoluzione sintomatologica con normalizzazione del quadro istopatologico.
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Isolated active ileitis: is it a mild subtype of Crohn's disease?
BACKGROUND:
Ileal intubation is being increasingly performed at colonoscopy and has in turn lead to an increasingly recognized subgroup of patients-those with mild terminal ileal inflammation, an entity that we have coined isolated active ileitis (IAI). The aims of this study were to define the natural history of IAI and determine if IAI shares a similar genetic and serologic profile with Crohn's disease (CD).
METHODS:
Patients with IAI were identified from our institution's histopathology and endoscopy databases. Cases attended for repeat colonoscopy and blood were analyzed for the expression of antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody, anti-OmpC, anti-Saccharomyces cerevisiae antigen (ASCA) IgA, ASCA IgG, and anti-CBir antibodies and NOD2 genotyping. Age and sex-matched healthy controls, CD, and UC cases were also recruited.
RESULTS:
Sixty-three patients with IAI were recruited. There was no significant difference in the prevalence of antibodies between IAI cases and healthy controls for antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody, OmpC, ASCA IgA, or ASCA IgG.
The presence of all 5 antibodies was significantly higher in the CD group than the IAI group, P < 0.05. There were 28.6% of CD cases that carried one or more NOD2 variants, compared to 26.2% of the IAI cohort and 6.1% of healthy controls. Forty-three cases underwent follow-up ileocolonoscopy. Six of 43 cases (14%) had definite CD.
CONCLUSIONS:
A majority of IAI cases developed persistent symptoms and terminal ileal abnormalities; however, only 14% developed classical, histological, or radiological features of CD. Although patients with IAI have a low level of seropositivity, similar to healthy controls, they do share an excess of NOD2 mutations with CD cases.
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