Immunohistochemical staining with chemokine panel of non-specific colitis predicts future IBD diagnosis

•There is a possible significant difficulty in differentiating between non-specific colitis (NSC) and early IBD patients with no cardinal endoscopic features.•This clarifies the need to find markers with high sensitivity and specificity for distinguishing among other forms of specific colitis.•This...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cytokine (Philadelphia, Pa.) Pa.), 2020-03, Vol.127, p.154935-154935, Article 154935
Hauptverfasser: El-Saka, Aymen M., Zamzam, Yomna A., Haydara, Tamer, Abd-Elsalam, Sherief
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•There is a possible significant difficulty in differentiating between non-specific colitis (NSC) and early IBD patients with no cardinal endoscopic features.•This clarifies the need to find markers with high sensitivity and specificity for distinguishing among other forms of specific colitis.•This study aimed to investigate the ability to use a chemokine panel (CCR9, CD146 and Foxp3) to predict NSC progression.•This panel of markers holds a promising hope for early IBD as predictive markers, discriminating IBD from NSC and as potential therapeutic targets. There is a possible significant difficulty in differentiating between non-specific colitis (NSC) and early IBD patients with no cardinal endoscopic features. This clarifies the need to find markers with high sensitivity and specificity for distinguishing between both and other forms of specific colitis. The aim of this study to investigate the ability to use a chemokine panel (CCR9, CD146 and Foxp3) among patients with lower gastrointestinal symptoms found to have NSC (but do not have current IBD) to predict which patients progress to/develop future IBD or other diagnoses of specific colitis. Colonoscopy was done for 182 patients complaining of chronic diarrhea and or constipation, abdominal distention and pain with negative history for IBD, after Histopathological evaluation; 138 cases showing non-specific inflammation submitted for further immunohistochemical CCR9, CD146 and Foxp3 staining. On follow up patients with persistent symptoms or worsen symptoms recolonoscopy was done followed by Histopathological examination of samples and compared by the earlier results. The studied markers expressed significantly in IBD patients differentiating them from NSC patients (p 
ISSN:1043-4666
1096-0023
DOI:10.1016/j.cyto.2019.154935