Author Contributions: JRA initiated study concept and design acquisition of data, analysis and interpretation of data, and drafting of the manuscript. YG, ST, MS analyzed and interpreted microbiome sequencing results. BHM, AP and JRM analyzed and interpreted the metabolomics results. MC participated in data acquisition. ZK participated in interpretation of data and critical revision of the manuscript DP and JK provided critical revisions of manuscript.
Background
Vitamin D has been linked to disease activity among patients with inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD). Prior investigation has also suggested that vitamin D levels may affect duration of therapy with anti-tumor necrosis factor-α (anti-TNF-α) medications among patients with IBD.
Aims
This study aimed to evaluate the relationship between vitamin D levels and odds of reaching remission while on an anti-TNF-α medication.
Methods
521 IBD patients enrolled in the Brigham and Women’s IBD Center database were eligible for inclusion. Patients treated with anti-TNF-α therapy who had vitamin D levels drawn within 6 months prior or 2 weeks after initiation of anti-TNF-α medication and who had reported remission status at 3 months were included. A logistic regression model adjusting for age, gender, IBD diagnosis, anti-TNF-α medication (infliximab versus adalimumab) and first or subsequent anti-TNF-α medication was used to identify the effect of vitamin D level on initial response to anti-TNF-α therapy.
Results
173 patients were included in the final analysis. On logistic regression, patients with normal vitamin D levels at the time of anti-TNF-α medication initiation had a 2.64 increased odds of remission at 3 months compared to patients with low vitamin D levels when controlling for age, gender, diagnosis, type of anti-TNF-α medication and first or subsequent anti-TNF-α medication (OR 2.64, 95% CI 1.31–5.32, p 0.0067).
Conclusion
These findings suggest that vitamin D levels may influence initial response to anti-TNF-α medication and that low vitamin D levels may predispose patients to decreased odds of remission.
Background
Recurrent Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a clinical challenge. Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) has emerged as a recurrent CDI therapy. Anecdotal concerns exist regarding worsening of IBD activity; however, prospective data among IBD patients are limited.
Methods
Secondary analysis from an open-label, prospective, multicenter cohort study among IBD patients with 2 or more CDI episodes was performed. Participants underwent a single FMT by colonoscopy (250 mL, healthy universal donor). Secondary IBD-related outcomes included rate of de novo IBD flares, worsening IBD, and IBD improvement—all based on Mayo or Harvey-Bradshaw index (HBI) scores. Stool samples were collected for microbiome and targeted metabolomic profiling.
Results
Fifty patients enrolled in the study, among which 15 had Crohn’s disease (mean HBI, 5.8 ± 3.4) and 35 had ulcerative colitis (mean partial Mayo score, 4.2 ± 2.1). Overall, 49 patients received treatment. Among the Crohn’s disease cohort, 73.3% (11 of 15) had IBD improvement, and 4 (26.6%) had no disease activity change. Among the ulcerative colitis cohort, 62% (22 of 34) had IBD improvement, 29.4% (11 of 34) had no change, and 4% (1 of 34) experienced a de novo flare. Alpha diversity significantly increased post-FMT, and ulcerative colitis patients became more similar to the donor than Crohn’s disease patients (P = 0.04).
Conclusion
This prospective trial assessing FMT in IBD-CDI patients suggests IBD outcomes are better than reported in retrospective studies.
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