| Literature DB >> 32292048 |
Luca Zanoli1,2, Dimitri P Mikhailidis3, Rosa Maria Bruno2,4,5, Maria T Abreu6, Silvio Danese7, Rami Eliakim8, Paolo Gionchetti9, Konstantinos H Katsanos10, Julien Kirchgesner11, Ioannis E Koutroubakis12, Torsten Kucharzik13, Peter L Lakatos14,15, Geoffrey C Nguyen16, Alfredo Papa17,18, Stephan R Vavricka19, Ian B Wilkinson20, Pierre Boutouyrie2,4,5.
Abstract
Current guidelines state that systemic inflammation, together with endothelial dysfunction, calcification, and hypercoagulability, predispose to premature atherosclerosis in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). We assessed whether IBD can affect aortic stiffness, a well-recognized vascular biomarker and an independent risk factor for cardiovascular (CV) disease (CVD) in several populations. Recent studies reported that aortic stiffness is increased in adults with IBD compared with matched controls. This association is dependent on inflammatory burden and disease duration, and is reduced by antitumor necrosis factor therapy. Considered together, current findings suggest that increased aortic stiffness is an extraintestinal manifestation of IBD. This is clinically relevant since measuring aortic stiffness in patients with IBD could improve risk assessment, especially in those without established CVD. Moreover, effective control of inflammation could lower CV risk in patients with IBD by reducing aortic stiffness. Further longitudinal studies are needed to better clarify (i) the relationship between disease duration and irreversible changes of the arterial wall, (ii) the clinical characteristics of patients with IBD that have an increased arterial stiffness at least in part reversible, and (iii) whether arterial stiffness is useful to evaluate the efficacy of immunosuppressive therapy.Entities:
Keywords: arterial stiffness; biomarkers; extraintestinal manifestation; inflammation; inflammatory bowel disease; pulse wave velocity
Year: 2020 PMID: 32292048 DOI: 10.1177/0003319720918509
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Angiology ISSN: 0003-3197 Impact factor: 3.619