View clinical trials related to IBD.
Filter by:Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (IBD) is a heterogeneous group of diseases regarding clinical presentation, disease course and treatment response. Pathogenesis is complex and multifactorial, based on interactions between genetic and environmental factors, gut microbiota and the immune system, leading to intestinal inflammation. As the immune reaction itself causes the intestinal damage, differences in components of this immune mediated inflammatory reaction between IBD patients might explain the heterogeneity in response to different therapy strategies. Identifying immune components that are associated to disease activity and prognosis would enable a more personalized treatment.
Background: Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a group of disorders characterized by chronic inflammation of the gastrointestinal tract with remissions and relapses. The two most common subtypes are Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC). In 2012, the burden-of-illness report from the Crohn's and Colitis Canada estimated that the direct medical costs of IBD in Canada were over one billion dollars, primarily funded through the Canadian public healthcare system. Many life style-related factors may play an important role in the pathogenesis of IBD and can contribute to trigger disease relapse, but several of these factors are poorly understood. These factors may include sleep disturbances. Data on sleep disturbance in children with IBD are limited. Sleep deprivation has been shown to cause reactivation of colitis in animal studies but similar data are lacking in humans especially in children. Hypothesis: In children with IBD, high scores for a sleep disturbance screener will be positively associated with IBD relapse Objective: To develop a non-invasive non-costly tool to screen for relapses in pediatric IBD patients through examining the association between sleep disturbances and disease relapse in children with IBD Methods: This study will incorporate an observational prospective design. Participants: Participants will be 90 children (ages 8-17 years ) under the care of the Pediatric IBD Program at the Children's Hospital, Winnipeg. All participants will have an established diagnosis of IBD. Measures: Sleep disturbances will be assessed using a sleep diary. Patients will be asked complete a daily sleep diary in the week preceding their clinic appointment. The sleep diary will provide information about latency to fall asleep, number of awakenings, duration of awakenings, total sleep time, sleep quality, and sleep efficiency. Mucosal inflammation will be assessed by measuring fecal calprotectin and clinical disease activity will be measured Pediatric Crohn's disease activity index (PCDAI) for CD and pediatric ulcerative colitis activity index (PUCAI) for UC at clinic visits Anxiety/Depression: As anxiety and depression are often comorbid with disturbed sleep, levels of symptoms in both domains will be assessed at clinic visit using the Child and Parent Report Versions of the Spence Anxiety Scale and the Child Depression Inventory (v. 2). Procedure: Upon obtaining informed consent, each participant will complete 7 days of sleep diary recording in the week prior to their clinic appointment. During the clinic visit, the PCDAI or PUCAI, Spence Anxiety Scales, Child Depression Inventory will be completed. Fecal samples will be collected for fecal calprotectin measurement as a surrogate marker for mucosal inflammation. Other investigations will include blood samples for serum hemoglobin, serum albumin, and inflammatory markers. Stool samples for infection screen will also be collected to exclude any possibility for gastrointestinal infection on top of IBD.A second clinic visit will be scheduled 3 months later and the whole process will be repeated in the second visit. Regression analysis will be performed to examine the association between sleep disturbances and disease activity, characteristics and patients' demographics Outcomes: Primary outcome: Cut-off score of a sleep screener that is associated with disease relapse (as diagnosed by fecal calprotectin value of >100 microgram/gram of stools) in children with IBD Secondary outcomes: 1. Correlation between sleep disturbance scores and clinical disease activity indices (PCDAI and PUCAI). 2. Identification of which sleep component (sleep duration, latency, fatigue, subjective quality) is the best at detecting a disease relapse. 3.Identification of whether sleep disturbance more accurately predicts relapse for CD than for UC.
The IBD South Limburg (IBDSL) project was initially designed as a prospective population based cohort study. Since 1991, all new IBD cases have been enrolled in the cohort and prospectively followed. As from 2011, the cohort is being scaled up into a population based biobank and focus expanded from epidemiology towards exploring underlying biologic mechanisms and identifying markers to predict disease course or therapy response. Every adult IBD patient, diagnosed in and permanently residing in South Limburg (The Netherlands), is eligible to participate. The population based nature was reached via a multi-faceted approach; incident cases were prospectively identified through the participating hospitals, and missed patients were retrospectively identified using the nationwide histopathology registry. In 2011, over 3500 patients were included, which represents 93% of the IBD population in South Limburg. The cohort includes baseline data, such as IBD phenotype, extent, location, behaviour, extra intestinal manifestations, medication, surgery, comorbidity and demographics. Data has prospectively been updated through chart review (clinical data), questionnaires (i.e. quality of life) and linkage to the authority database (vital state, residence). The biobank includes serum, plasma, DNA, faeces, biopsies and exhaled air. We welcome new collaborations. Applications for collaboration are first to be approved by our IBD-SL committee.
The study aims at studying the outcomes of a protocol-based handling of newly diagnosed Inflammatory bowel disease ( IBD ) patients within a defined uptake area in Norway. It is a descriptive study and no hypothesis is predefined. Cytokine studies, QoL and fatigue assessment will be included for hypothesis-generating purposes.