Toward an Integrated Clinical, Molecular and Serological Classification of Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Report of a Working Party of the 2005 Montreal World Congress of Gastroenterology

Mark S. Silverberg(Mount Sinai Hospital), Jack Satsangi(Western General Hospital), Tariq Ahmad(University of Oxford), Ian Arnott(Western General Hospital), Çharles N. Bernstein(University of Manitoba), Steven R. Brant(Johns Hopkins University), R. Caprilli(Sapienza University of Rome), Jean–Frédéric Colombel(Hôpital Claude Huriez), Christoph Gasché(Medical University of Vienna), Karel Geboes(KU Leuven), Derek P. Jewell(University of Oxford), Amir Karban, Edward V. Loftus(Mayo Clinic), A. S. Peña(Amsterdam UMC Location Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam), Robert H. Riddell(Mount Sinai Hospital), David B. Sachar(Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai), Stefan Schreiber(Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel), A. Hillary Steinhart(Mount Sinai Hospital), Stephan R. Targan(Cedars-Sinai Medical Center), Séverine Vermeire, Bryan F. Warren(John Radcliffe Hospital)
Canadian Journal of Gastroenterology
January 1, 2005
Cited by 3,384Open Access
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Abstract

The discovery of a series of genetic and serological markers associated with disease susceptibility and phenotype in inflammatory bowel disease has led to the prospect of an integrated classification system involving clinical, serological and genetic parameters. The Working Party has reviewed current clinical classification systems in Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis and indeterminate colitis, and provided recommendations for clinical classification in practice. Progress with respect to integrating serological and genetic markers has been examined in detail, and the implications are discussed. While an integrated system is not proposed for clinical use at present, the introduction of a widely acceptable clinical subclassification is strongly advocated, which would allow detailed correlations among serotype, genotype and clinical phenotype to be examined and confirmed in independent cohorts of patients and, thereby, provide a vital foundation for future work.


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