School of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Department of Gastroenterology, Concord Repatriation General Hospital, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Inflamm Bowel Dis. 2021 Nov 15;27(Suppl 2):S17-S24. doi: 10.1093/ibd/izab179.
Despite recent developments in therapy for inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs), there have been limited advances in diagnostic tools available to aid in disease management. A growing body of evidence suggests that there are important host-microbe interactions at the mucosal interface that modulate the inflammatory response in patients with IBD. Additionally, the importance of mucosal integrity and its disruption appears to be important in the pathophysiology and perpetuation of the disease. The ability to characterize this interface may provide valuable information for both disease monitoring and identification of new treatment targets. Endoscopy remains the primary tool for disease monitoring, and mucosal healing is the primary therapeutic target in IBD treatment. However, establishing mucosal healing requires repetitive endoscopic procedures, and endoscopy is limited by factors such as invasiveness, cost, and risk of adverse events. Moreover, the use of a bowel preparation for colonoscopies alters the mucus layer and thus perturbs evaluation of the host-microbe interaction. Stool sampling may also be inaccurate because it reflects the end state of metabolites and proteins, failing to take into account the degradation or alteration of substrates of interest by bacterial proteases and other enzymes during passage through the colon. A novel sampling capsule, called the Recoverable Sampling System (RSS), is being developed as a complementary tool to colonoscopy. The RSS is intended to be a platform for noninvasive autonomous sampling, preservation, handling, and storage of analytes of interest found in the gastrointestinal fluids. A proprietary preservative contained within the chambers of the capsule has been developed to stabilize DNA and proteins for ex vivo microbiome and metabolomics analyses. Surrogate markers such as SPP24 and GUCA2a have been identified to correlate with gut health, intestinal permeability, and inflammation and could be locally sampled by the RSS. The potential clinical utility of an RSS device is broad and would likely be able to guide therapy by allowing for more frequent disease monitoring, aiding in disease characterization, and facilitating in the identification of novel therapeutic targets.
尽管炎症性肠病 (IBD) 的治疗方法最近有所发展,但可用的诊断工具在疾病管理方面的进展有限。越来越多的证据表明,在 IBD 患者中,黏膜界面存在重要的宿主-微生物相互作用,调节炎症反应。此外,黏膜完整性及其破坏的重要性似乎在疾病的病理生理学和持续存在中很重要。对这种界面进行特征描述可能为疾病监测和识别新的治疗靶点提供有价值的信息。内窥镜检查仍然是疾病监测的主要工具,黏膜愈合是 IBD 治疗的主要治疗目标。然而,确立黏膜愈合需要重复的内镜检查程序,并且内镜检查受到侵袭性、成本和不良事件风险等因素的限制。此外,结肠镜检查中使用肠道准备会改变黏液层,从而干扰对宿主-微生物相互作用的评估。粪便取样也可能不准确,因为它反映了代谢物和蛋白质的最终状态,没有考虑到细菌蛋白酶和其他酶在通过结肠时对感兴趣的底物的降解或改变。一种名为可回收采样系统 (RSS) 的新型采样胶囊正在被开发作为结肠镜检查的补充工具。RSS 旨在成为一种非侵入性自主采样、保存、处理和储存胃肠道液中感兴趣的分析物的平台。胶囊腔室内包含的专有防腐剂已被开发用于稳定 DNA 和蛋白质,以便进行体外微生物组学和代谢组学分析。已经确定了 SPP24 和 GUCA2a 等替代标志物与肠道健康、肠道通透性和炎症相关,并可以通过 RSS 进行局部采样。RSS 设备的潜在临床应用广泛,很可能能够通过允许更频繁的疾病监测、帮助疾病特征描述以及促进新的治疗靶点的识别来指导治疗。