Crohn's Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Infectious Agents in Pediatric Crohn's Disease
Six sites of the Pediatric Inflammatory Bowel Disease Consortium (plus 2 additional sites)
will participate in this study. The participating sites will be that of the Principal
Investigator (PI), Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA (Benjamin D. Gold, MD);
Texas Children's Hospital / Baylor College of Medicine (George Ferry, MD and Tony Olive,
MD); Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA (Bob Baldassano, MD); University
of Chicago Children's Hospital, Chicago, IL (Barbara Kirschner, MD); University of
California, San Francisco (Mel Heyman, MD); Mass General Hospital / Harvard University
(Harland Winter, MD); V.A. Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA (David
Relman, MD); Children's Center For Digestive Healthcare, Atlanta, GA (Stanley Cohen, MD);
and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA (Drs. Jeannette Guarner, Siobhan
O'Connor and Thomas Shinnick)
The duration of study is 2 yrs.
Objectives:
1. Improve the methods to collect biopsies from the colon and ileum, tissue storage
techniques and best methods to detect specific infections in children with Crohn's
disease;
2. Determine if there are specific infectious agents that are more common in children with
Crohn's disease, and;
3. Determine if there are types of children with Crohn's disease (e.g., children living in
Boston, African American children) who may be more at risk for getting the infections.
The study design involves children ages 6 months through 17 11/12 years of age who are
undergoing a clinically-indicated colonoscopy. Subjects will be grouped into cases and
controls.
- Any child ages 6 mos through 17 11/12 years of age, undergoing a clinically-indicated
colonoscopy as determined by the treating physician, is eligible for enrollment. About
500 patients will be enrolled in this study.
- Cases will consist of those children within the defined age group, who are undergoing
diagnostic colonoscopy and have the definitive diagnosis of Crohn's disease.
- Children who have the diagnosis of indeterminate colitis or ulcerative colitis for the
purpose of this R03, will be excluded as cases and from initial analysis, but will have
tissue specimens banked for subsequent evaluation for infectious agents.
- Controls will consists of children within the defined age group, undergoing clinically
indicated colonoscopy and who are not diagnosed with Crohn's disease, ulcerative
colitis or indeterminate colitis (e.g., juvenile polyps, irritable bowel syndrome or
functional bowel disease).
- Stool specimen (5ml/1 tsp) will be collected to test for different types of bacteria
- A questionnaire will be administered to each research volunteer.
- Each subject's medical information (i.e. diagnosis, disease stage, and laboratory
results) will be stored electronically in a separate access-based database. A unique
identifier will be assigned to each patient entered into the study and will also be
used for blinding of the specimens analyzed by the pathologist and by molecular assays
for infectious agents.
- Colonoscopy will be performed by the treating pediatric gastroenterologist and biopsies
obtained in the usual standard of care.
- Clinical biopsies from the rectum, left, right, transverse colon and cecum will be
placed in formalin containing vials as per standard of care for the clinical
pathologist and diagnostic evaluation.
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), which includes CD and ulcerative colitis (UC), is
estimated to affect approximately 1 - 2 million Americans. Recent studies strongly suggest
that these disorders are increasing in prevalence in developed and developing countries, and
in first generation immigrants to industrialized nations. Changing epidemiology of IBD
implies that, in addition to a genetic susceptibility for disease, an environmental trigger
or exposure likely impacts disease expression. However, the specific pathobiology and
etiology of IBD remain unclear. Knowledge of the host genetic basis of IBD has advanced,
including characterization of a novel susceptibility gene in adult and adolescent CD
(NOD2/CARD-15) located on the pericentromeric region of chromosome 16. Recent studies not
only implicate NOD2/CARD-15 in susceptibility to CD, but also suggest a link between the
innate immune response to bacterial components and development of disease. Thus,
well-designed investigations of infectious etiologies of CD, with sufficient power to detect
differences in infection between IBD and non-IBD patients, are critically needed. Yet,
deficiencies in the methods and tools for such studies still exist.
Both infectious and noninfectious mechanisms of pathogenesis remain plausible but
unconfirmed. To date, scientific evidence cannot conclude whether one or more infectious
pathogens triggers or determines the development and outcomes of CD or UC. Persistent
exposure to "normal resident flora" in an abnormally permeable gut might also conceivably
determine disease. Thus carefully designed investigations that apply systematically
evaluated, reliable and reproducible detection assays are needed to confirm or disprove
infectious hypotheses of causation. The first step is a pilot study that validates study
design and complementary assays (morphology-, molecular- and culture-based) and uniformly
applies these to target patient and control tissues (i.e., pediatric endoscopic biopsies).
It must focus on newly diagnosed CD (surrogate for "incident" CD) in a well-characterized
group of patients and appropriate, well-selected controls who meet uniform case and control
definitions. It must develop reproducible methods to ensure that results from different
studies can be compared and appropriate clinical interpretations made in order to translate
research results into treatment and prevention strategies that decrease the burden of CD. At
this time, deficiencies in both methodology and laboratory technology impede successful
conduct and interpretation of the needed studies on causality.
Based on age of onset, newly diagnosed children with IBD, may be closer to triggering
immunopathogenic events that initiate the inflammatory response than adults. They may also
represent a unique population for the study of environmental factors (e.g., infection),
i.e., younger age usually brings shorter and less complicated exposure histories to confound
analyses. It is reasonable to postulate that a single agent or polymicrobial insults, in the
genetically susceptible host, may determine the development or course of CD and it may be
easier to identify some infectious determinants in childhood CD. We hypothesize that
adequate collection of intestinal tissue biopsies from uniformly defined pediatric CD cases
and controls and validation of sensitive and specific laboratory tools to detect potential
infectious triggers of CD in these particular specimen types are needed to test causality
for infection in CD. The Pedi IBDC, 6 large, geographically diverse U.S. centers represents
an excellent platform to investigate potential infectious factors in CD, annually evaluating
and recording clinical and epidemiologic data on ~288 newly diagnosed pediatric CD cases in
a comprehensive data repository. The Pedi IBDC has a system to assess the safety and
efficacy of its research. The Consortium also provides a pool of cases and controls in which
to implement standardized specimen collection techniques under a well-conceived algorithm.
The R03 assembled research team draws on a wide range of expertise and institutional
resources in epidemiology, infectious disease pathology, molecular microbiology,
mycobacteriology and virology, and the conduct of clinical trials. The multi-disciplinary
expertise of this proposal can test and validate in small endoscopic biopsies the
histopathology and molecular microbial detection assays previously validated in alternative
paraffin-embedded or frozen tissues.
The R03 funding mechanism will facilitate tissue collection and banking techniques and
evaluations of a panel of assays to detect select infectious agents ranging from those
thought not to cause CD to those speculated as etiologic, from non-pathogenic commensals to
known and undetermined pathogens. Therefore, our specific study aims are to:
1. standardize the collection (e.g., anatomic site of biopsy origin, biopsy number and
collection technique), processing and banking of gastrointestinal tissue biopsies
obtained during clinically-indicated endoscopy of well-characterized children with CD
followed by the Pedi IBDC;
2. verify and standardize the definition of appropriate controls, evaluating both
"non-diseased" biopsies from cases and clinically-indicated biopsies from children
without IBD (e.g., juvenile polyposis, Hirschsprung's disease) to improve the design of
future studies;
3. standardize and validate in pediatric biopsies detection methods to identify potential
infectious risk factors for CD through parallel, paired and complementary
pathology-based (IHC), broad range amplification-based molecular (PCR) and
organism-specific (e.g., MAP) molecular analysis, and primary culture of tissue
specimens taken from well-defined cases and controls.
Additionally, molecular characterization of microbiota in the feces from cases and controls
will be compared to microbial detection in their respective tissue biopsies. Successful
completion of these goals will provide a platform for imminent comprehensive investigations
that characterize clinically relevant microbial risk factors for CD in the child and quite
possibly the adult patient.
;
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