Mucosal Inflammatory and Wound Healing Gene Programmes Reveal Targets for Stricturing Behaviour in Paediatric Crohn’s Disease

Yael Haberman(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Phillip Minar(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Rebekah Karns(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Phillip J. Dexheimer(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Sudhir Ghandikota(University of Cincinnati Medical Center), Samuel Tegge(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Daniel Shapiro(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Brianne Shuler(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Suresh Venkateswaran(Emory University), Tzipi Braun(Tel Aviv University), Allison Ta(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Thomas D. Walters(University of Toronto), Robert N. Baldassano(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Joshua D. Noe(Medical College of Wisconsin), Joel R. Rosh(Goryeb Children's Hospital), James Markowitz(Cohen Children's Medical Center), Jennifer L. Dotson(Nationwide Children's Hospital), David Mack(University of Ottawa), Richárd Kellermayer(Texas Children's Hospital), Anne M. Griffiths(University of Toronto), Melvin B. Heyman(University of California, San Francisco), Susan S. Baker(University at Buffalo, State University of New York), Dedrick E. Moulton(Monroe Carell Jr. Children's Hospital), Ashish Patel(Southwestern Medical Center), Ajay Gulati(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Steven J. Steiner(Riley Hospital for Children), Neal S. LeLeiko(Providence College), Anthony Otley(Izaak Walton Killam Health Centre), Maria Oliva‐Hemker, David Ziring(Cedars-Sinai Medical Center), Ranjana Gokhale(Comer Children's Hospital), Sandra Kim(Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh), Stephen L. Guthery(Primary Children's Hospital), Stanley A. Cohen(Troy Gastroenterology), Scott B. Snapper(Boston Children's Hospital), Bruce J. Aronow(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Michael C. Stephens(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Greg Gibson(Georgia Institute of Technology), Jonathan R. Dillman(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Marla Dubinsky(Mount Sinai Hospital), Jeffrey S. Hyams(Connecticut Children's Medical Center), Subra Kugathasan(Emory University), Anil G. Jegga(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Lee A. Denson(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center)
Journal of Crohn s and Colitis
August 4, 2020
Cited by 30Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Ileal strictures are the major indication for resective surgery in Crohn's disease (CD). We aimed to define ileal gene programs present at diagnosis linked with future stricturing behavior during five year follow-up, and to identify potential small molecules to reverse these gene signatures. METHODS: Antimicrobial serologies and pre-treatment ileal gene expression were assessed in a representative subset of 249 CD patients within the RISK multicenter pediatric CD inception cohort study, including 113 that are unique to this report. These data were used to define genes associated with stricturing behavior and for model testing to predict stricturing behavior. A bioinformatics approach to define small molecules which may reverse the stricturing gene signature was applied. RESULTS: 19 of the 249 patients developed isolated B2 stricturing behavior during follow-up, while 218 remained B1 inflammatory. Using deeper RNA sequencing than in our prior report, we have now defined an inflammatory gene signature including an oncostatin M co-expression signature, tightly associated with extra-cellular matrix (ECM) gene expression in those who developed stricturing complications. We further computationally prioritize small molecules targeting macrophage and fibroblast activation and angiogenesis which may reverse the stricturing gene signature. A model containing ASCA and CBir1 serologies and a refined eight ECM gene set was significantly associated with stricturing development by year five after diagnosis (AUC (95th CI) = 0.82 (0.7-0.94)). CONCLUSION: An ileal gene program for macrophage and fibroblast activation is linked to stricturing complications in treatment naïve pediatric CD, and may inform novel small molecule therapeutic approaches.


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