Abstract

Preclinical ulcerative colitis is poorly defined. We aimed to characterize the preclinical systemic inflammation in ulcerative colitis, using a comprehensive set of proteins. We obtained plasma samples biobanked from individuals who developed ulcerative colitis later in life (n= 72) and matched healthy controls (n= 140) within a population-based screening cohort. We measured 92 proteins related to inflammation using a proximity extension assay. The biologic relevance of these findings was validated in an inception cohort of patients with ulcerative colitis (n= 101) and healthy controls (n= 50). To examine the influence of genetic and environmental factors on these markers, a cohort of healthy twin siblings of patients with ulcerative colitis (n= 41) and matched healthy controls (n= 37) were explored. Six proteins (MMP10, CXCL9, CCL11, SLAMF1, CXCL11 and MCP-1) were up-regulated (P < .05) in preclinical ulcerative colitis compared with controls based on both univariate and multivariable models. Ingenuity Pathway Analyses identified several potential key regulators, including interleukin-1β, tumor necrosis factor, interferon-gamma, oncostatin M, nuclear factor-κB, interleukin-6, and interleukin-4. For validation, we built a multivariable model to predict disease in the inception cohort. The model discriminated treatment-naïve patients with ulcerative colitis from controls with leave-one-out cross-validation (area under the curve= 0.92). Consistently, MMP10, CXCL9, CXCL11, and MCP-1, but not CCL11 and SLAMF1, were significantly up-regulated among the healthy twin siblings, even though their relative abundances seemed higher in incident ulcerative colitis. A set of inflammatory proteins are up-regulated several years before a diagnosis of ulcerative colitis. These proteins were highly predictive of an ulcerative colitis diagnosis, and some seemed to be up-regulated already at exposure to genetic and environmental risk factors.

Highlights

  • BACKGROUND & AIMSPreclinical ulcerative colitis is poorly defined

  • To minimize the potential effects of active inflammation because of a likely diagnostic delay, 8 individuals who were diagnosed with ulcerative colitis within 1 year from blood sampling were excluded

  • The preclinical inflammatory response of ulcerative colitis preceding symptoms is yet to be defined, and our current knowledge about how genetic and early environmental risk factors initiate and propagate an immune response that can lead to a subclinical inflammation is poor

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Summary

Introduction

BACKGROUND & AIMSPreclinical ulcerative colitis is poorly defined. We aimed to characterize the preclinical systemic inflammation in ulcerative colitis, using a comprehensive set of proteins. The biologic relevance of these findings was validated in an inception cohort of patients with ulcerative colitis (n 1⁄4 101) and healthy controls (n 1⁄4 50). To examine the influence of genetic and environmental factors on these markers, a cohort of healthy twin siblings of patients with ulcerative colitis (n 1⁄4 41) and matched healthy controls (n 1⁄4 37) were explored. RESULTS: Six proteins (MMP10, CXCL9, CCL11, SLAMF1, CXCL11 and MCP-1) were up-regulated (P < .05) in preclinical ulcerative colitis compared with controls based on both univariate and multivariable models. CONCLUSIONS: A set of inflammatory proteins are up-regulated several years before a diagnosis of ulcerative colitis. Preclinical assessment of inflammatory proteins could provide insight into the early phases of ulcerative colitis, identify individuals at increased risk for developing the disease, and work as a diagnostic tool

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