Biomarker discovery in inflammatory bowel diseases
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Kalla, Rahul
Abstract
There is an unmet need for novel biomarker discovery in Inflammatory Bowel
Diseases (IBD) to aid clinical management in several clinical settings
including diagnosis and prognosis. With an ever-advancing repertoire of
biological therapies on the horizon, it is important to personalise treatments
at an early stage. The aim of this thesis is to explore the clinical utility of
novel blood-based biomarkers in diagnosis, disease classification and
prognosis in 2 cohorts: newly diagnosed IBD and acute severe colitis.
Investigating the circulating methylome, 290 probes exhibited Holm
significant IBD-associated methylation differences, including VMP1/MIR21
(p=7.5×10-14) and RPS6KA2 (1.1×10-19) and were consistent within the
European cohort. 11 Differentially methylated positions (DMPs) predicted
treatment escalation after Holm adjustment (top probe p=0.003). A panel of 6
probes identified 2 patient subgroups that have significantly different disease
courses (Hazard Ratio (HR) 10.5, 95%CI: 4.3-25.6; logrank p=1.5×10-24).
The 6 probe marker outperformed conventional biomarkers in predicting
treatment escalation (hsCRP>4mg/L, HR 3.2(1.7-5.8), logrank p=0.0004 and
Alb<36g/L, HR 2.9(1.5-5.6), p=0.0001).
Within the same cohort, a novel proximity extension assay (PEA) was then
utilised to identify novel diagnostic and prognostic protein markers. 61
proteins were significantly associated with IBD including MMP12 (Holm-adjusted
p=4.1×10-26). A total of 9 proteins predicted disease course in this
cohort. Using a panel of 7 randomly selected top prognostic probes, 2 patient
groups were identified that had significantly different disease courses: logrank p=2.2×10-10, HR 5.6(2.0-15.6), outperforming conventional
biomarkers in predicting treatment escalation (hsCRP>4mg/L, HR 3.2(1.7-
5.8), logrank p=0.0003 and Alb<36g/L, HR 2.7(1.4-5.2), p=0.0004). In a
subcohort, serum calprotectin (SC) and conventional blood markers were
investigated for their utility in diagnosis and prognosis in IBD. SC performed
at par with CRP at differentiating IBD from controls with an area under the
curve (AUC) of 0.87 (CI 0.81-0.92). For prognostication, both albumin and
SC remained significant predictors of treatment escalation in IBD (logrank
test p=5.1×10-5).
MicroRNAs (miRNA) are small non-coding nucleic acids that have the
capacity to modulate gene expression. Using small RNA sequencing in acute
severe colitis (ASUC) and healthy controls (HC), 10 serum-based miRNA
markers were significantly associated with acute severe colitis, including
miR-30a-5p. Validating the findings using qPCR, miR-30a-5p was
downregulated in ASUC (p=0.003). Furthermore, miR30a-5p remained a
significant predictor of eventual colectomy in acute colitis (logrank test
p=0.0014).
These data highlight the translational potential for methylation, miRNA and
proteomic biomarkers in diagnosing and prognosticating in IBD.
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