View clinical trials related to Intestinal GVHD.
Filter by:The study evaluate the role of the use of bed-side multiparametric ultrasound study in the diagnosis of gastrointestinal acute graft-versus host disease (aGvHD) in patients underwent allogenic stem cell transplantation
The objective of the ORION study is to explore the changes of gut microbiota composition following MaaT013 administration and its impact on the immune system in GVHD patients.
Therapy of severe intestinal graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) despite the introduction of novel target agents is associated with worse outcome compared to the other forms. Response to steroids is observed only in about 10% of patients. The most promising approaches are JAK inhibition and fecal microbiota transplantation. In this pilot study we evaluate this combination treatment in the first line.
Intestinal acute graft-vs-host disease (GVHD) is a life-threatening complication after allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation. Non-invasive diagnostic procedures are still lacking and diagnosis is difficult. We hypothesized that contrast-enhanced ultrasound sonography (CEUS) could detect microcirculation changes of the bowel walls during intestinal GVHD and help to detect and monitor treatment response. We employed CEUS to prospectively evaluate intestinal GVHD in 83 consecutive transplant patients between 2008 and 2011. Fourteen /83 patients with biopsy-proven intestinal GVHD were selected as study group. Fourteen patients with biopsy-proven stomach GVHD without intestinal symptoms (N=16), normal volunteers (N=6) and patients with neutropenic enterocolitis (N=4), were chosen as control group. All patients were evaluated with both standard transabdominal ultrasonography (US) and CEUS at the onset of intestinal symptoms, during clinical follow up and at flare of symptoms. Standard US revealed non-specific bowel wall thickening, and simultaneous involvement of multiple intestinal segments in 9/14 patients. CEUS showed three distinct patterns of microcirculation changes that correlated with GVHD activity. These findings were not observed in the control group. Moreover, CEUS findings correlated with treatment response and predicted flare of intestinal symptoms. CEUS is a non-invasive, easily reproducible bed-side tool to detect and monitor intestinal GVHD.