After Surgically Induced Remission, Ileal and Colonic Mucosa-Associated Microbiota Predicts Crohn's Disease Recurrence.

Journal: Clinical Gastroenterology And Hepatology : The Official Clinical Practice Journal Of The American Gastroenterological Association
Published:
Abstract

Objective: Investigating the tissue-associated microbiota after surgically induced remission may help to understand the mechanisms initiating intestinal inflammation in Crohn's disease.

Methods: Patients with Crohn's disease undergoing ileocolic resection were prospectively recruited in 6 academic centers. Biopsy samples from the neoterminal ileum, colon, and rectosigmoid were obtained from colonoscopies performed after surgery. Microbial DNA was extracted for 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Microbial diversity and taxonomic differential relative abundance were analyzed. A random forest model was applied to analyze the performance of clinical and microbial features to predict recurrence. A Rutgeerts score ≥i2 was deemed as endoscopic recurrence.

Results: A total of 349 postoperative colonoscopies and 944 biopsy samples from 262 patients with Crohn's disease were analyzed. Ileal inflammation accounted for most of the explained variance of the ileal and colonic mucosa-associated microbiota. Samples obtained from 97 patients who were in surgically induced remission at first postoperative colonoscopy who went on to develop endoscopic recurrence at second colonoscopy showed lower diversity and microbial deviations when compared with patients who remained in endoscopic remission. Depletion of genus Anaerostipes and increase of several genera from class Gammaproteobacteria at the 3 biopsy sites increase the risk of further recurrence. Gut microbiome was able to predict future recurrence better than clinical features.

Conclusions: Ileal and colonic mucosa-associated microbiome deviations precede development of new-onset ileal inflammation after surgically induced remission and show good predictive performance for future recurrence. These findings suggest that targeted microbial modulation is a plausible modality to prevent postoperative Crohn's disease recurrence.

Authors
Cristian Hernández Rocha, Williams Turpin, Krzysztof Borowski, Joanne Stempak, Ksenija Sabic, Kyle Gettler, Christopher Tastad, Colleen Chasteau, Ujunwa Korie, Mary Hanna, Abdul Khan, Emebet Mengesha, Alain Bitton, Marc Schwartz, Arthur Barrie, Lisa Datta, Mark Lazarev, Steven Brant, John Rioux, Dermot P Mcgovern, Richard Duerr, L Schumm, Judy Cho, Mark Silverberg