337 research outputs found

    Identification of novel genetic determinants in the high prevalence early-onset inflammatory bowel disease population in Scotland

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    Grant no. 072789/Z/03/ZBackground & aims: The inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), Crohn‟s disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC), are common causes of chronic gastrointestinal morbidity, affecting up to 1 in 250 of the general population in Northern Europe. Up to 25% of IBD is diagnosed during childhood or adolescence. The aims for this thesis were to study the epidemiology, natural history and novel genetic determinants of childhood onset IBD in Scotland. Methods: The existing repository of childhood onset and adult onset IBD patients, established at the Western General Hospital in Edinburgh, was used and expanded. Thus, anatomical location and behaviour of disease were assessed in 416 childhood onset (276 CD, 99 UC, 41 IBDU diagnosed before 17th birthday) and 1297 adult patients (596 CD, 701 UC) using the Montreal classification. Additional phenotypic (at diagnosis and at regular follow-up intervals) and epidemiological data were gathered. In this cohort, genotyping of germline variants in putative susceptibility genes (NOD1/CARD4, IL23R, ATG16L1, IRGM, FLG) was performed to enable single variant and haplotype-tagging association studies. Genotypic data of population-matched healthy controls were obtained locally (n=342) and from the Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium (n=2937). Results: Compared with adults, childhood-onset CD was characterized by a more extensive, “panenteric” phenotype (ileocolonic plus upper GI; p<0.0001 OR23.3; 95% CI (13.4–40.6) with less isolated ileal (p<0.0001 OR 0.06 (0.03–0.1) or colonic disease (p<0.0001, OR 0.3 (0.2–0.5)). In 39%, the anatomic extent increased within 2 years. UC was also more extensive in children at diagnosis vs adults (p0.05 after Bonferroni correction). We found that the allelic frequency of rs11209026*A located within the IL23R gene, differed significantly between IBD / CD cases and controls (p=0.01 OR 0.51(0.3-0.9) and p=0.04 OR 0.5 (0.3-0.98)). Using a gene-wide haplotype-tagging strategy, we demonstrated that the multiple association signals of the IL23R locus are independent of rs11209026 in childhood onset IBD and CD. In Scottish children, the effect of germline variation of ATG16L1 and IRGM on CD susceptibility was relatively small (OR< 1.4), and appeared less than in adult disease. Genotype–phenotype analysis demonstrated an association of pure ileal disease with the ATG16L1 rs2241880G-allele (p=0.02 OR 1.3 (1.03–1.7)). Using binary logistic regression analysis, we confirmed the effect of rs2241880 genotype (GG) on ileal disease versus colonic disease (p=0.03 OR 2.4 (1.05–5.6)). Null alleles of the epithelial barrier protein FLG have no important effect on IBD susceptibility (p>0.4), but contribute to the high prevalence of atopy, notably co-existent eczema and food allergy (p=0.0003 OR 3.3 (1.7–6.6) and p=0.0001 OR 4.5 (2.0–10.0), respectively). Conclusion: Childhood onset IBD is characterised by extensive intestinal involvement and progression of disease after diagnosis. Genetic association studies in childhood and adult IBD have provided evidence for a large number of new genomic loci. These loci encode genes involved in a number of homeostatic mechanisms: innate pattern recognition receptors, the differentiation of Th17-lymphocytes, autophagy, maintenance of epithelial barrier integrity and the orchestration of the secondary immune response

    EVI1 activation in blast crisis CML due to juxtaposition to the rare 17q22 partner region as part of a 4-way variant translocation t(9;22)

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Variant translocations t(9;22) occur in 5 to 10% of newly diagnosed CMLs and additional genetic changes are present in 60–80% of patients in blast crisis (BC). Here, we report on a CML patient in blast crisis presenting with a four-way variant t(9;22) rearrangement involving the <it>EVI1 </it>locus.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Dual-colour Fluorescence In Situ Hybridisation was performed to unravel the different cytogenetic aberrations. Expression levels of <it>EVI1 </it>and <it>BCR/ABL1 </it>were investigated using real-time quantitative RT-PCR.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>In this paper we identified a patient with a complex 4-way t(3;9;17;22) which, in addition to <it>BCR/ABL1 </it>gene fusion, also resulted in <it>EVI1 </it>rearrangement and overexpression.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>This report illustrates how a variant t(9;22) translocation can specifically target a second oncogene most likely contributing to the more aggressive phenotype of the disease. Molecular analysis of such variants is thus warranted to understand the phenotypic consequences and to open the way for combined molecular therapies in order to tackle the secondary oncogenic effect which is unresponsive to imatinib treatment.</p

    Chromosome 11q13.5 variant associated with childhood eczema:an effect supplementary to filaggrin mutations

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    BackgroundAtopic eczema is a common inflammatory skin disease with multifactorial etiology. The genetic basis is incompletely understood; however, loss of function mutations in the filaggrin gene (FLG) are the most significant and widely replicated genetic risk factor reported to date. The first genome-wide association study in atopic eczema recently identified 2 novel genetic variants in association with eczema susceptibility: a single nucleotide polymorphism on chromosome 11q13.5 (rs7927894) and a single nucleotide polymorphism (rs877776) within the gene encoding hornerin on chromosome 1q21.ObjectiveTo test the association of these 2 novel variants with pediatric eczema and to investigate their interaction with FLG null mutations.MethodsCase-control study to investigate the association of rs7927894, rs877776 and the 4 most prevalent FLG null mutations with moderate-severe eczema in 511 Irish pediatric cases and 1000 Irish controls. Comprehensive testing for interaction between each of the loci was also performed.ResultsThe association between rs7927894 and atopic eczema was replicated in this population (P = .0025, χ2 test; odds ratio, 1.27; 95% CI, 1.09-1.49). The 4 most common FLG null variants were strongly associated with atopic eczema (P = 1.26 × 10−50; combined odds ratio, 5.81; 95% CI, 4.51-7.49). Interestingly, the rs7927894 association was independent of the well-established FLG risk alleles and may be multiplicative in its effect. There was no significant association between rs877776 and pediatric eczema in this study.ConclusionSingle nucleotide polymorphism rs7927894 appears to mark a genuine eczema susceptibility locus that will require further elucidation through fine mapping and functional analysis

    The microaerophilic microbiota of de-novo paediatric inflammatory bowel disease: the BISCUIT study

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    &lt;p&gt;Introduction: Children presenting for the first time with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) offer a unique opportunity to study aetiological agents before the confounders of treatment. Microaerophilic bacteria can exploit the ecological niche of the intestinal epithelium; Helicobacter and Campylobacter are previously implicated in IBD pathogenesis. We set out to study these and other microaerophilic bacteria in de-novo paediatric IBD.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;Patients and Methods: 100 children undergoing colonoscopy were recruited including 44 treatment naïve de-novo IBD patients and 42 with normal colons. Colonic biopsies were subjected to microaerophilic culture with Gram-negative isolates then identified by sequencing. Biopsies were also PCR screened for the specific microaerophilic bacterial groups: Helicobacteraceae, Campylobacteraceae and Sutterella wadsworthensis.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;Results: 129 Gram-negative microaerophilic bacterial isolates were identified from 10 genera. The most frequently cultured was S. wadsworthensis (32 distinct isolates). Unusual Campylobacter were isolated from 8 subjects (including 3 C. concisus, 1 C. curvus, 1 C. lari, 1 C. rectus, 3 C. showae). No Helicobacter were cultured. When comparing IBD vs. normal colon control by PCR the prevalence figures were not significantly different (Helicobacter 11% vs. 12%, p = 1.00; Campylobacter 75% vs. 76%, p = 1.00; S. wadsworthensis 82% vs. 71%, p = 0.312).&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;Conclusions: This study offers a comprehensive overview of the microaerophilic microbiota of the paediatric colon including at IBD onset. Campylobacter appear to be surprisingly common, are not more strongly associated with IBD and can be isolated from around 8% of paediatric colonic biopsies. S. wadsworthensis appears to be a common commensal. Helicobacter species are relatively rare in the paediatric colon.&lt;/p&gt

    Diagnostic Delay Is Associated with Complicated Disease and Growth Impairment in Paediatric Crohn\u27s Disease

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    Background: Paediatric data on the association between diagnostic delay and inflammatory bowel disease [IBD] complications are lacking. We aimed to determine the effect of diagnostic delay on stricturing/fistulising complications, surgery, and growth impairment in a large paediatric cohort, and to identify predictors of diagnostic delay. Methods: We conducted a national, prospective, multicentre IBD inception cohort study including 1399 children. Diagnostic delay was defined as time from symptom onset to diagnosis \u3e75th percentile. Multivariable proportional hazards [PH] regression was used to examine the association between diagnostic delay and stricturing/fistulising complications and surgery, and multivariable linear regression to examine the association between diagnostic delay and growth. Predictors of diagnostic delay were identified using Cox PH regression. Results: Overall (64% Crohn\u27s disease [CD]; 36% ulcerative colitis/IBD unclassified [UC/IBD-U]; 57% male]), median time to diagnosis was 4.2 (interquartile range [IQR] 2.0-9.2) months. For the overall cohort, diagnostic delay was \u3e9.2 months; in CD, \u3e10.8 months and in UC/IBD-U, \u3e6.6 months. In CD, diagnostic delay was associated with a 2.5-fold higher rate of strictures/internal fistulae (hazard ratio [HR] 2.53, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.41-4.56). Every additional month of diagnostic delay was associated with a decrease in height-for-age z-score of 0.013 standard deviations [95% CI 0.005-0.021]. Associations persisted after adjusting for disease location and therapy. No independent association was observed between diagnostic delay and surgery in CD or UC/IBD-U. Diagnostic delay was more common in CD, particularly small bowel CD. Abdominal pain, including isolated abdominal pain in CD, was associated with diagnostic delay. Conclusions: Diagnostic delay represents a risk factor for stricturing/internal fistulising complications and growth impairment in paediatric CD
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