The Interplay Between Use of Biological Therapies, Psychological State, and the Microbiome in IBD

Author:

Tavakoli Paris,Vollmer-Conna Ute,Hadzi-Pavlovic Dusan,Vázquez-Campos Xabier,Grimm Michael Carl

Abstract

BackgroundThis study examines longitudinal bio-psychological dynamics and their interplay in IBD patients undergoing conventional and biological therapies.MethodsFifty IBD participants (24 UC, 26 CD) in clinical remission were followed for 12 months. Complete longitudinal datasets, biological samples, validated scores of psychological status were collected monthly for analysis of association. Microbiome analysis was performed to identify microbial dynamics and signatures. Patients were grouped on disease phenotype (CD, UC) and mode of treatment (biological therapies, non-biological treatment). General linear models, mixed models, cluster analysis, and analyses of variance were used to examine the longitudinal trends of the variables and their associations over time. Results were corrected for multiple testing.ResultsResults substantiated different interactions between biological therapy and longitudinal trends of inflammatory biomarkers in remission CD and UC patients as well as significant differences between CD and UC patients in their psychological measures during clinical remission, with UC patients having inferior condition compared to CD. A significant reduction in microbial diversity in CD patients compared to UC was identified. Results characterized considerable differences in longitudinal microbial profile between those taking and not taking biological treatment in UC patients, but not in CD patients.ConclusionA different trajectory of interdependence was identified between psychological state, sleep, and microbial dynamics with mode of treatment when compared between CD and UC patients. Further studies should investigate the causal relationships between bio-psychological factors for improved treatment purposes.

Funder

St George and Sutherland Medical Research Foundation

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Subject

General Medicine

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