Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Internal Medicine, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center/Paul L. Foster School of Medicine, El Paso, TX, USA.
Digestive Oncology Research Center, Digestive Disease Research Institute, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.
Neurogastroenterol Motil. 2018 Jan;30(1). doi: 10.1111/nmo.13192. Epub 2017 Aug 29.
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Increases in mucosal immune cells have frequently been observed in irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) patients. However, this finding is not completely consistent between studies, possibly due to a combination of methodological variability, population differences and small sample sizes. We performed a meta-analysis of case-control studies that compared immune cell counts in colonic biopsies of IBS patients and controls.
PubMed and Embase were searched in February 2017. Results were pooled using standardized mean difference (SMD) and were considered significant when zero was not within the 95% confidence interval (CI). Heterogeneity was assessed based on I statistics where I ≤ 50% and I > 50% indicated fixed and random effect models, respectively.
Twenty-two studies on 706 IBS patients and 401 controls were included. Mast cells were increased in the rectosigmoid (SMD: 0.38 [95% CI: 0.06-0.71]; P = .02) and descending colon (SMD: 1.69 [95% CI: 0.65-2.73]; P = .001) of IBS patients. Increased mast cells were observed in both constipation (IBS-C) and diarrhea predominant IBS (IBS-D). CD3 T cells were increased in the rectosigmoid (SMD: 0.53 [95% CI: 0.21-0.85]; P = .001) and the descending colon of the IBS patients (SMD: 0.79, 95% CI [0.28-1.30]; P = .002). This was possibly in relation to higher CD4 T cells in IBS (SMD: 0.33 [95% CI: 0.01-0.65]; P = .04) as there were no differences in CD8 T cells.
CONCLUSIONS & INFERENCES: Mast cells and CD3 T cells are increased in colonic biopsies of patients with IBS vs non-inflamed controls. These changes are segmental and sometimes IBS-subtype dependent. The diagnostic value of the quantification of colonic mucosal cells in IBS requires further investigation.
在肠易激综合征(IBS)患者中,经常观察到黏膜免疫细胞增多。然而,由于方法学的可变性、人群差异和样本量小等因素的综合影响,这一发现并不完全一致。我们对比较 IBS 患者和对照组结肠活检免疫细胞计数的病例对照研究进行了荟萃分析。
于 2017 年 2 月在 PubMed 和 Embase 上进行检索。使用标准化均数差(SMD)进行汇总,并在零值不在 95%置信区间(CI)内时认为结果具有统计学意义。根据 I 统计量评估异质性,其中 I 小于等于 50%和大于 50%分别表示固定效应模型和随机效应模型。
纳入了 22 项针对 706 例 IBS 患者和 401 名对照者的研究。直肠乙状结肠(SMD:0.38 [95%CI:0.06-0.71];P=0.02)和降结肠(SMD:1.69 [95%CI:0.65-2.73];P=0.001)中肥大细胞增多。在便秘型肠易激综合征(IBS-C)和腹泻型肠易激综合征(IBS-D)中均观察到肥大细胞增多。直肠乙状结肠(SMD:0.53 [95%CI:0.21-0.85];P=0.001)和降结肠(SMD:0.79,95%CI [0.28-1.30];P=0.002)中 CD3 T 细胞增多。IBS 患者的 CD4 T 细胞更高(SMD:0.33 [95%CI:0.01-0.65];P=0.04),但 CD8 T 细胞无差异,这可能与 CD3 T 细胞增多有关。
与非炎症对照相比,IBS 患者的结肠活检中肥大细胞和 CD3 T 细胞增多。这些变化呈节段性,有时与 IBS 亚型相关。在 IBS 中,定量分析结肠黏膜细胞的诊断价值需要进一步研究。