OBJECTIVES:VSL#3 is a high-potency probiotic mixture that has been used successfully in the treatment of pouchitis. The primary end point of the study was to assess the effects of supplementation with VSL#3 in patients affected by relapsing ulcerative colitis (UC) who are already under treatment with 5-aminosalicylic acid (ASA) and/or immunosuppressants at stable doses.METHODS:A total of 144 consecutive patients were randomly treated for 8 weeks with VSL#3 at a dose of 3,600 billion CFU/day (71 patients) or with placebo (73 patients).RESULTS:In all, 65 patients in the VSL#3 group and 66 patients in the placebo group completed the study. The decrease in ulcerative colitis disease activity index (UCDAI) scores of 50% or more was higher in the VSL#3 group than in the placebo group (63.1 vs. 40.8; per protocol (PP) P=0.010, confidence interval (CI)95% 0.51–0.74; intention to treat (ITT) P=0.031, CI95% 0.47–0.69). Significant results with VSL#3 were recorded in an improvement of three points or more in the UCDAI score (60.5% vs. 41.4% PP P=0.017, CI95% 0.51–0.74; ITT P=0.046, CI95% 0.47–0.69) and in rectal bleeding (PP P=0.014, CI95% 0.46–0.70; ITT P=0.036, CI95% 0.41–0.65), whereas stool frequency (PP P=0.202, CI95% 0.39–0.63; ITT P=0.229, CI95% 0.35–0.57), physician's rate of disease activity (PP P=0.088, CI95% 0.34–0.58; ITT P=0.168, CI95% 0.31–0.53), and endoscopic scores (PP P=0.086, CI95% 0.74–0.92; ITT P=0.366, CI95% 0.66–0.86) did not show statistical differences. Remission was higher in the VSL#3 group than in the placebo group (47.7% vs. 32.4% PP P=0.069, CI95% 0.36–0.60; ITT P=0.132, CI95% 0.33–0.56). Eight patients on VSL#3 (11.2%) and nine patients on placebo (12.3%) reported mild side effects.CONCLUSIONS:VSL#3 supplementation is safe and able to reduce UCDAI scores in patients affected by relapsing mild-to-moderate UC who are under treatment with 5-ASA and/or immunosuppressants. Moreover, VSL#3 improves rectal bleeding and seems to reinduce remission in relapsing UC patients after 8 weeks of treatment, although these parameters do not reach statistical significance.
Helicobacter pylori (Hp)-associated gastritis is characterized by an increased number of acute and chronic inflammatory cells secreting cytokines that contribute to maintain and expand the local inflammation. Locally induced IL-8 is believed to play a major role in the Hp-associated acute inflammatory response. Factors/mechanisms that regulate IL-8 induction are, however, not fully understood. In the present study we investigated whether Hp infection is associated with an increased production of IL-17, a T cell-derived cytokine capable of modulating IL-8 gene expression. We showed that both IL-17 RNA transcripts and protein were expressed at a higher level in the whole gastric mucosal and lamina propria mononuclear cell samples from Hp-infected patients than in those from uninfected subjects. Hp eradication was associated with a marked down-regulation of IL-17 expression. The addition of a neutralizing anti-IL-17 Ab to the gastric lamina propria mononuclear cell cultures resulted in a significant inhibition of IL-8 secretion, indicating that IL-17 contributes to enhance IL-8 in the Hp-colonized gastric mucosa. Consistently, stimulation of MKN 28 cells, a gastric epithelial cell line, with IL-17 increased IL-8 secretion. Finally, conditioned medium from the IL-17-stimulated MKN 28 cell cultures promoted the in vitro polymorphonuclear leukocyte migration. This effect was inhibitable by a neutralizing IL-8 but not IL-17 Ab. Together, these data indicate that biologically active IL-17 production is increased during Hp infection, suggesting the possibility that this cytokine may play an important role in the inflammatory response to the Hp colonization.
In utero exposure to anti-TNFα drugs does not seem to be associated with increased short-term or long-term risk of severe infections in children.
Crohn’ s disease (CD) is a chronic intestinal inflammatory disorder characterized by aberrant mucosal Th1 cell activation and production of IL-12, the major Th1-driving factor. The T cell response to IL-12 is dependent on the expression of a specific receptor composed of two subunits, termed IL-12Rβ1 and IL-12Rβ2. The content of IL-12Rβ2, as measured at the mRNA level, is crucial in regulating Th1 differentiation. In this study we therefore investigated IL-12Rβ2 RNA transcripts in CD. IL-12Rβ2 expression was increased in active CD as well as Helicobacter pylori (HP)-associated gastritis and Salmonella colitis compared with that in inactive CD, ulcerative colitis, noninflammatory controls, and celiac disease. In contrast, IL-12Rβ1 transcripts were expressed at comparable levels in all samples. In CD, IL-12Rβ2 expression strictly correlated with tyrosine phosphorylation of STAT4, a key component of the IL-12-dependent Th1 polarization. This was associated with a pronounced expression of IFN-γ. Transcripts for IL-12/p40 were detected in CD, HP-positive, and Salmonella colitis patients, but not in celiac disease, indicating that IL-12Rβ2 up-regulation occurs only in IL-12-associated Th1 gastrointestinal diseases. Finally, we showed that stimulation of lamina propria mononuclear cells with IL-12 enhanced IL-12Rβ2, suggesting that IL-12 regulates IL-12Rβ2 expression in human gastrointestinal mucosa. The data show that the signaling pathway used by IL-12 to induce Th1 differentiation is increased at the site of disease in CD, further supporting the view that IL-12/IL-12R signals contribute to the inflammatory response in this condition.
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