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Erschienen in: Digestive Diseases and Sciences 11/2016

12.09.2016 | Original Article

Impact of Low Immunoglobulin G Levels on Disease Outcomes in Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Diseases

verfasst von: Nicholas Horton, Xianrui Wu, Jessica Philpott, Ari Garber, Jean-Paul Achkar, Aaron Brzezinski, Bret A. Lashner, Bo Shen

Erschienen in: Digestive Diseases and Sciences | Ausgabe 11/2016

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Abstract

Background

Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs) are considered immune-mediated disorders with dysregulated innate and adaptive immunities. Secondary immunogloblin deficiency can occur in IBD and its impact on the disease course of IBD is not clear.

Aims

We sought to determine associations between low IgG/G1 levels and poor clinical outcomes in IBD patients.

Methods

This historic cohort study was performed on IBD patients with obtained IgG/IgG1 levels. The primary outcome was defined as any IBD-related bowel resection surgery and/or hospitalization. Subgroup analyses assessed particular surgical outcomes in Crohn’s disease (CD), ulcerative colitis (UC) or indeterminate colitis (IC), and ileal pouch–anal anastomosis (IPAA). The secondary outcomes included IBD drug escalations and C. difficile or cytomegalovirus infections.

Results

A total of 136 IBD patients had IgG/G1 levels checked and adequate follow-up, 58 (42.6 %) with normal IgG/G1 levels and 78 (57.4 %) having low levels. A total of 49 patients (62.8 %) with low immunoglobulin levels had IBD-related surgeries or hospitalizations, compared to 33 patients (56.9 %) with normal levels [odds ratio (OR) 1.28, 95 % confidence interval (CI) 0.64–2.56; p = 0.49]. Low IgG/G1 levels were associated with IBD-related surgery in CD in univariate analysis [hazard ratio (HR) 4.42, 95 % CI 1.02–19.23; p = 0.048] and in Kaplan–Meier survival curve analysis (p = 0.03), with a trend toward significance on multivariate analysis (HR 3.07, 95 % CI 0.67–14.31; p = 0.15). IBD patients with low IgG/G1 levels required more small bowel resections (12.8 vs. 1.7 %, p = 0.024) and 5-aminosalicylate initiations (28.2 vs. 13.8 %, p = 0.045).

Conclusions

Our study demonstrated a possible association between low IgG/G1 levels and poor outcomes in CD including surgery. Future implications include using immunoglobulin levels in IBD patients as a prognostic indicator or boosting humoral immunity as a treatment in this subset.
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Metadaten
Titel
Impact of Low Immunoglobulin G Levels on Disease Outcomes in Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
verfasst von
Nicholas Horton
Xianrui Wu
Jessica Philpott
Ari Garber
Jean-Paul Achkar
Aaron Brzezinski
Bret A. Lashner
Bo Shen
Publikationsdatum
12.09.2016
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Digestive Diseases and Sciences / Ausgabe 11/2016
Print ISSN: 0163-2116
Elektronische ISSN: 1573-2568
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10620-016-4294-z

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