Literature DB >> 25110409

Treating inflammatory bowel disease by adsorptive leucocytapheresis: a desire to treat without drugs.

Abbi R Saniabadi1, Tomotaka Tanaka1, Toshihide Ohmori1, Koji Sawada1, Takayuki Yamamoto1, Hiroyuki Hanai1.   

Abstract

Ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease are the major phenotypes of the idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), which afflicts millions of individuals throughout the world with debilitating symptoms, impairing function and quality of life. Current medications are aimed at reducing the symptoms or suppressing exacerbations. However, patients require life-long medications, and this can lead to drug dependency, loss of response together with adverse side effects. Indeed, drug side effects become additional morbidity factor in many patients on long-term medications. Nonetheless, the efficacy of anti-tumour necrosis factors (TNF)-α biologics has validated the role of inflammatory cytokines notably TNF-α in the exacerbation of IBD. However, inflammatory cytokines are released by patients' own cellular elements including myeloid lineage leucocytes, which in patients with IBD are elevated with activation behaviour and prolonged survival. Accordingly, these leucocytes appear logical targets of therapy and can be depleted by adsorptive granulocyte/monocyte apheresis (GMA) with an Adacolumn. Based on this background, recently GMA has been applied to treat patients with IBD in Japan and in the European Union countries. Efficacy rates have been impressive as well as disappointing. In fact the clinical response to GMA seems to define the patients' disease course, response to medications, duration of active disease, and severity at entry. The best responders have been first episode cases (up to 100%) followed by steroid naïve and patients with a short duration of active disease prior to GMA. Patients with deep ulcers together with extensive loss of the mucosal tissue and cases with a long duration of IBD refractory to existing medications are not likely to benefit from GMA. It is clinically interesting that patients who respond to GMA have a good long-term disease course by avoiding drugs including corticosteroids in the early stage of their IBD. Additionally, GMA is very much favoured by patients for its good safety profile. GMA in 21st century reminds us of phlebotomy as a major medical practice at the time of Hippocrates. However, in patients with IBD, there is a scope for removing from the body the sources of pro-inflammatory cytokines and achieve disease remission. The bottom line is that by introducing GMA at an early stage following the onset of IBD or before patients develop extensive mucosal damage and become refractory to medications, many patients should respond to GMA and avoid pharmacologics. This should fulfill the desire to treat without drugs.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Adsorptive granulocytes/monocytes apheresis; Complement activation fragments; Corticosteroid sparing effect; Inflammatory bowel disease; Myeloid lineage leucocytes; Treating inflammatory bowel disease without drugs

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25110409      PMCID: PMC4123360          DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v20.i29.9699

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  World J Gastroenterol        ISSN: 1007-9327            Impact factor:   5.742


  117 in total

1.  The efficacy of intensive granulocyte and monocyte adsorption apheresis in a patient with Crohn's disease complicated by extensive subcutaneous aseptic neutrophilic abscesses.

Authors:  Shingo Kato; Eriko Hosomi; Fumi Amano; Taisuke Kobayashi; Kazuhito Kani; Ryuichi Yamamoto; Tomonari Ogawa; Akihiko Matsuda; Yoshiki Sato; Seiichi Izaki; Tetsuya Mitarai; Koji Yakabi
Journal:  J Crohns Colitis       Date:  2012-03-02       Impact factor: 9.071

2.  On the removal of diffusable substances from the circulating blood by means of dialysis. Transactions of the Association of American Physicians, 1913.

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3.  Treatment of pyoderma gangrenosum associated with Crohn's disease.

Authors:  Toshihide Ohmori; Akio Yamagiwa; Itaru Nakamura; Kou Nishikawa; Abby R Saniabadi
Journal:  Am J Gastroenterol       Date:  2003-09       Impact factor: 10.864

4.  Open label trial of granulocyte apheresis suggests therapeutic efficacy in chronically active steroid refractory ulcerative colitis.

Authors:  Wolfgang Kruis; Axel Dignass; Elisabeth Steinhagen-Thiessen; Julia Morgenstern; Joachim Mössner; Stephan Schreiber; Maurizio Vecchi; Alberto Malesci; Max Reinshagen; Robert Löfberg
Journal:  World J Gastroenterol       Date:  2005-11-28       Impact factor: 5.742

5.  Granulocytapheresis in steroid-dependent and steroid-resistant patients with inflammatory bowel disease: a prospective observational study.

Authors:  Rodolfo Sacco; Antonio Romano; Alessandro Mazzoni; Marco Bertini; Graziana Federici; Salvatore Metrangolo; Giuseppe Parisi; Cecilia Nencini; Celeste Giampietro; Michele Bertoni; Emanuele Tumino; Fabrizio Scatena; Giampaolo Bresci
Journal:  J Crohns Colitis       Date:  2013-07-17       Impact factor: 9.071

Review 6.  Role of cytokines in the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease.

Authors:  K A Papadakis; S R Targan
Journal:  Annu Rev Med       Date:  2000       Impact factor: 13.739

7.  Long-term clinical impact of early introduction of granulocyte and monocyte adsorptive apheresis in new onset, moderately active, extensive ulcerative colitis.

Authors:  Takayuki Yamamoto; Satoru Umegae; Koichi Matsumoto
Journal:  J Crohns Colitis       Date:  2012-01-12       Impact factor: 9.071

8.  Relationship between fecal calprotectin, intestinal inflammation, and peripheral blood neutrophils in patients with active ulcerative colitis.

Authors:  Hiroyuki Hanai; Ken Takeuchi; Takayuki Iida; Nobuhito Kashiwagi; Abby R Saniabadi; Isao Matsushita; Yoshihiko Sato; Naoki Kasuga; Toshihiro Nakamura
Journal:  Dig Dis Sci       Date:  2004-09       Impact factor: 3.199

9.  Selective granulocyte and monocyte adsorptive apheresis as a first-line treatment for steroid naïve patients with active ulcerative colitis: a prospective uncontrolled study.

Authors:  Yasuo Suzuki; Naoki Yoshimura; Abby R Saniabadi; Yasushi Saito
Journal:  Dig Dis Sci       Date:  2004-04       Impact factor: 3.199

10.  Use of long-term leukapheresis in the treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia.

Authors:  D Goldfinger; V Capostagno; C Lowe; H J Sacks; R A Gatti
Journal:  Transfusion       Date:  1980 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 3.157

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  22 in total

Review 1.  Immunological Mechanisms of Adsorptive Cytapheresis in Inflammatory Bowel Disease.

Authors:  Esteban Sáez-González; Inés Moret; Diego Alvarez-Sotomayor; Francia Carolina Díaz-Jaime; Elena Cerrillo; Marisa Iborra; Pilar Nos; Belén Beltrán
Journal:  Dig Dis Sci       Date:  2017-04-21       Impact factor: 3.199

2.  Cytomegalovirus Colitis, Cytomegalovirus Hepatitis and Systemic Cytomegalovirus Infection: Common Features and Differences.

Authors:  Hiroshi Nakase; Hans Herfarth
Journal:  Inflamm Intest Dis       Date:  2016-01-23

3.  Simultaneous inference of phenotype-associated genes and relevant tissues from GWAS data via Bayesian integration of multiple tissue-specific gene networks.

Authors:  Mengmeng Wu; Zhixiang Lin; Shining Ma; Ting Chen; Rui Jiang; Wing Hung Wong
Journal:  J Mol Cell Biol       Date:  2017-12-01       Impact factor: 6.216

Review 4.  Pharmacological- and non-pharmacological therapeutic approaches in inflammatory bowel disease in adults.

Authors:  Gerda C Leitner; Harald Vogelsang
Journal:  World J Gastrointest Pharmacol Ther       Date:  2016-02-06

5.  Case of severe alcoholic hepatitis treated with granulocytapheresis.

Authors:  Yukari Watanabe; Kenya Kamimura; Tomohiro Iwasaki; Hiroyuki Abe; Shunsaku Takahashi; Ken-Ichi Mizuno; Manabu Takeuchi; Atsushi Eino; Ichiei Narita; Shuji Terai
Journal:  World J Clin Cases       Date:  2016-11-16       Impact factor: 1.337

6.  Efficacy of granulocyte and monocyte apheresis for antibiotic-refractory pouchitis after proctocolectomy for ulcerative colitis: an open-label, prospective, multicentre study.

Authors:  Takayuki Yamamoto; Toshiaki Tanaka; Tadashi Yokoyama; Takahiro Shimoyama; Hiroki Ikeuchi; Motoi Uchino; Toshiaki Watanabe
Journal:  Therap Adv Gastroenterol       Date:  2016-11-25       Impact factor: 4.409

7.  Granulocyte-Monocyte Apheresis in Steroid-Dependent, Azathioprine-Intolerant/Resistant Moderate Ulcerative Colitis: A Prospective Multicenter Study.

Authors:  Gianni Imperiali; Arnaldo Amato; Maria Maddalena Terpin; Ivo Beverina; Aurora Bortoli; Massimo Devani; Chiara Viganò
Journal:  Gastroenterol Res Pract       Date:  2017-12-21       Impact factor: 2.260

8.  Adsorptive Granulocyte and Monocyte Apheresis Is Effective in Ulcerative Colitis Patients Both with and without Concomitant Prednisolone.

Authors:  Keiji Matsuda; Kohei Ohno; Yuka Okada; Takahiro Yagi; Mitsuo Tsukamoto; Yoshihisa Fukushima; Atsushi Horiuchi; Ryu Shimada; Tsuyoshi Ozawa; Tamuro Hayama; Takeshi Tsuchiya; Junko Tamura; Hisae Iinuma; Keijiro Nozawa; Hitoshi Aoyagi; Akari Isono; Koichiro Abe; Shinya Kodashima; Takatsugu Yamamoto; Yoshitaka Kawasaki; Yoshifuru Tamura; Yuko Sasajima; Fukuo Kondo; Yojiro Hashiguchi
Journal:  Inflamm Intest Dis       Date:  2020-01-28

9.  Safety and Efficacy of Granulocyte/Monocyte Apheresis in Steroid-Dependent Active Ulcerative Colitis with Insufficient Response or Intolerance to Immunosuppressants and/or Biologics [the ART Trial]: 12-week Interim Results.

Authors:  Axel Dignass; Ayesha Akbar; Ailsa Hart; Sreedhar Subramanian; Gilles Bommelaer; Daniel C Baumgart; Jean-Charles Grimaud; Guillaume Cadiot; Richard Makins; Syed Hoque; Guillaume Bouguen; Bruno Bonaz
Journal:  J Crohns Colitis       Date:  2016-01-27       Impact factor: 9.071

10.  Soluble ST2 is a sensitive clinical marker of ulcerative colitis evolution.

Authors:  David Díaz-Jiménez; Marjorie De la Fuente; Karen Dubois-Camacho; Glauben Landskron; Janitza Fuentes; Tamara Pérez; María Julieta González; Daniela Simian; Marcela A Hermoso; Rodrigo Quera
Journal:  BMC Gastroenterol       Date:  2016-08-26       Impact factor: 3.067

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