25 results on '"Tracy Coelho"'
Search Results
2. G21 Overlapping clinical profiles when juvenile dermatomyositis presents with coeliac disease
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Rebecca Lucier, Farah M Barakat, Tara Hall, Cheryl Main, Alice Leahy, Kerstin Nott, and Tracy Coelho
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- 2022
3. IBD 3 Weight-based prescribing of thiopurines may not accurately optimise metabolite levels in the safe and therapeutic range: a paediatric IBD study
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Farah M Barakat, Sophie Lewis, James Ashton, Luke Gilbert, Kouros Driscoll, Claire Barnes, Adebola Sholeye-Bolaji, Hang Phan, Guo Cheng, Rachel Haggarty, Akshay Batra, Nadeem A Afzal, R Mark Beattie, Sarah Ennis, and Tracy Coelho
- Published
- 2022
4. P47 Setting up a regional home calprotectin service during the COVID-19 pandemic offering hospital-based testing to local and regional paediatric IBD patients in Wessex
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Robert Mark Beattie, Chris Roberts, Nadeem A. Afzal, Tracy Coelho, Akshay Batra, Claire Barnes, Efrem Eren, and Jo Ward
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Pandemic ,Medical laboratory ,medicine ,Hospital based ,Calprotectin ,Patient group ,business ,Faecal calprotectin ,Test (assessment) - Abstract
Background The first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in the UK severely restricted our regional paediatric GI outpatient services affecting our ability to assess patients in hospital, further compounded by distance of travel of patients (An audit form 2019 showed 70% of patients endoscoped were from outside the local, rather than Southampton area). The issue was further compounded by some DGH’s, who stopped offering the calprotectin test due to COVID-19 infection risk to the staff. Although home based calprotectin kits are also available, families using them have reported their use cumbersome and difficult to process tests at home. In addition, calprotectin results from other laboratories may be difficult to access. These limitations led to the development of a new regional service, in which samples taken at home are posted to the hub hospital laboratory (where the IBD clinic is based) for Calprotectin testing. Aim To study the benefits of offering a service for posting faecal samples for calprotectin testing to a hub laboratory. Methods Children (0–18 years) with IBD in the Wessex region, UK needing a calprotectin test were given postal faecal calprotectin packs (PFCP), either by hand in clinic or posted to their home. Each PFCP contained a labelled specimen bottle with immunology request form, bio-packaging box, sealable return bag (UN3373 compliant) with attached freepost label and instruction sheet. A Calprotectin cut off level of Results 63 patients (M=34, 54% & F=29, 46%) were given PFCP between 27th July & 5th of Nov 2020 with 52.4% posted PFCP and 47.6% given PFCP by hand in the paediatric GI clinic. The patients resided at a mean distance of 41.6 miles (1 SD = 24.1 miles) as the crow flies from the hospital. A mean of 25 days (1SD = 10 days) were taken from posting/handing of PFCP to the lab test result being obtained. The PFCP was returned by 50 patients (79.4% compliance) with a diagnosis of Crohn’s disease 34.9%, UC 28.6%, IBDU 7.9%, oral ulcers 4.8% and 23.8% of patients referred for endoscopy with IBD like symptoms. 30% of the patients with IBD (15/50) posting the PFCP had an abnormal test result. This led to a change in management in 40% of the patients. In the patient group referred with suspected IBD only 1/15 patients had an abnormal calprotectin test. 70% of patients with a normal test were able to be reassured without further investigation. Conclusion This is the first reported series, offering to a large region a robust method for samples to be taken at home and posted to a central hub laboratory for calprotectin testing during the COVID-19 pandemic. Test results were readily available, being performed in the same hospital site as the IBD clinic. Compliance with the new PFCP remains high with 80% using the new PFCP service, with value in early identification of patients who may not have much in terms of symptoms and avoidance of endoscopy in others with a normal calprotectin.
- Published
- 2021
5. P60 Ustekinumab is an effective drug for steroid-free remission in children with refractory IBD and anti TNF-alpha induced psoriasis
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Farah M Barakat, Jonathan Baker, Tracy Coelho, Claire Barnes, Akshay Batra, Nadeem A. Afzal, and R Mark Beattie
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Medical record ,Disease ,medicine.disease ,Infliximab ,Refractory ,Internal medicine ,Psoriasis ,Monoclonal ,Ustekinumab ,Adalimumab ,Medicine ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Management of paediatric Crohn’s disease (CD) presents significant challenges. Escalation of therapy to biologics or a ‘top-down’ approach, with early introduction of biologics, is common. Anti-TNF agents are widely used, but the use of ustekinumab is still limited. Ustekinumab is a human monoclonal antibody targeting the p40 subunit of both IL-12/-23. Ustekinumab has recently emerged as an alternative treatment option in children with failure of response to anti-TNF alpha treatment and those developing intolerable side effects on anti-TNF treatment including psoriasis. Aims Data on ustekinumab efficacy in paediatric IBD are limited. We report our experience on the use of this monoclonal antibody in paediatric IBD at a tertiary GI service in Wessex. Methods Retrospective review of all paediatric patients (≤ 18 years) receiving ustekinumab for the management of their IBD. Data was collected by reviewing patients’ electronic medical records and available results. Only those who had the treatment for at least 26 weeks were included. Steroid free remission were the primary outcomes of this study and resolution of psoriasis (where applicable) as a secondary outcome measure. Results Between November 2017- November 2020, 12 patients (M:F=6:6) patients were identified who were commenced on ustekinumab for the treatment of their IBD; 9 patients with CD and 3 with IBDU- Crohn’s like. One patient was excluded as the duration of treatment was The median duration between diagnosis and initiation of treatment with ustekinumab was 104 weeks and median duration of treatment with ustekinumab at the time of the review was 60 weeks (26–160 weeks). All patients received standard anti-TNF alpha treatment prior to ustekinumab. (All 11 patients received infliximab, 7 patients received both infliximab and adalimumab, and 4 patients were escalated directly from infliximab to ustekinumab). The key indications for considering ustekinumab were primary non-response (N=5, 45%), secondary loss of response (N=3, 27%) and anti-TNF-alpha induced psoriasis. Six patients (54%) developed psoriasis while on treatment with anti-TNF alpha. Three patients (27%) were switched to ustekinumab primarily in view of anti-TNF-alpha induced psoriasis. Steroid-free remission rates were (81%) at 26 weeks (N=9), (90%) at 52 weeks and 100% thereafter in 5 individuals who remained on ustekinumab over 1 year at the last review. No significant side-effects were reported in any patient. 85% of patients (N=5:6) who were identified with psoriasis have shown good response to switching treatment from anti-TNF to ustekinumab. Conclusions This data suggests that ustekinumab is a useful and a safe treatment option in children with IBD refractory to standard monoclonal therapy and in those developing intolerable anti-TNF alpha induced side-effects, psoriasis in particular. Larger studies from multiple centres would be required to develop standardised pathways for the use of this promising monoclonal agent for the management of paediatric IBD.
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- 2021
6. Expression profile of the matricellular protein periostin in paediatric inflammatory bowel disease
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Bhumita Vadgama, Annie Griffin, Imogen S. Stafford, Akshay Batra, Anthony P. Williams, James J. Ashton, Tracy Coelho, Robert Mark Beattie, Saida Mukanova, Kapura Adrisova, Sarah Ennis, Rachel Haggarty, Anton Borissenko, Michael P. Stanton, Aiymkul Ashimkhanova, Alisher Khojanazarov, Yifang Gao, Enrico Mossotto, Dieter Riethmacher, Nadeem A. Afzal, and Eva Sonnenberg-Riethmacher
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Adult ,Male ,Gene isoform ,Adolescent ,Colon ,Science ,Inflammation ,Disease ,Periostin ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,Article ,Pathogenesis ,Crohn Disease ,Fibrosis ,Humans ,Protein Isoforms ,Medicine ,Gene Regulatory Networks ,Prospective Studies ,Intestinal Mucosa ,Child ,Multidisciplinary ,business.industry ,Matricellular protein ,Diagnostic markers ,Chronic inflammation ,medicine.disease ,digestive system diseases ,Crohn's disease ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Ulcerative colitis ,Case-Control Studies ,Child, Preschool ,Immunology ,Colitis, Ulcerative ,Female ,Gene expression ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Cell Adhesion Molecules - Abstract
The precise role of periostin, an extra-cellular matrix protein, in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is unclear. Here, we investigated periostin in paediatric IBD including its relationship with disease activity, clinical outcomes, genomic variation and expression in the colonic tissue. Plasma periostin was analysed using ELISA in 144 paediatric patients and 38 controls. Plasma levels were assessed against validated disease activity indices in IBD and clinical outcomes. An immuno-fluorescence for periostin and detailed isoform-expression analysis in the colonic tissue was performed in 23 individuals. We integrated a whole-gene based burden metric ‘GenePy’ to assess the impact of variation in POSTN and 23 other genes functionally connected to periostin. We found that plasma periostin levels were significantly increased during remission compared to active Crohn’s disease. The immuno-fluorescence analysis demonstrated enhanced peri-cryptal ring patterns in patients compared to controls, present throughout inflamed, as well as macroscopically non-inflamed colonic tissue. Interestingly, the pattern of isoforms remained unchanged during bowel inflammation compared to healthy controls. In addition to its role during the inflammatory processes in IBD, periostin may have an additional prominent role in mucosal repair. Additional studies will be necessary to understand its role in the pathogenesis, repair and fibrosis in IBD.
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- 2021
7. Growth failure is rare in a contemporary cohort of paediatric inflammatory bowel disease patients
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Zachary Green, Florina Borca, Mark J. Johnson, Nadeem A. Afzal, James J. Ashton, Aneurin Young, Sarah Ennis, Akshay Batra, R Mark Beattie, and Tracy Coelho
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Surgical resection ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Disease ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,Gastroenterology ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Crohn Disease ,030225 pediatrics ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,Crohn's disease ,business.industry ,Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Inflammatory Bowel Diseases ,Ulcerative colitis ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Cohort ,Colitis, Ulcerative ,business ,Linear growth - Abstract
Aim: We assessed growth in a paediatric inflammatory bowel disease (PIBD) cohort. Methods: Paediatric inflammatory bowel disease patients were eligible if they were diagnosed at Southampton Children's Hospital from 2011 to 2018. Weight and height standard deviation scores (SDS) were retrieved. Mean SDS values, SDS change and anti-TNF status were analysed at diagnosis and during follow-up. Results: Four hundred and ninety patients were included, 313 with Crohn's disease (CD). CD patients presented with mean height SDS −0.13, −0.1 at 1-year, −0.11 at 2-years and −0.03 at 5 years, reflecting preserved linear growth. There was no significant height-SDS change from diagnosis to 5-year follow-up, +0.12, 95%-CI: 0.48 to −0.24. Mean weight-SDS at diagnosis was −0.39, driven by CD patients (−0.65). Mean weight-SDS approached 0 after 1 year and remained at the 50th centile throughout follow-up. Growth in ulcerative colitis was maintained. In multivariable regression males had worse height growth from diagnosis to transition (P =.036). Anti-TNF treatment (P =.013) and surgical resection (P =.005) were also associated with poorer linear growth. Patients treated with anti-TNF therapy had lower height-SDS compared to those never treated with anti-TNF at 1 year (−0.2 vs −0.01, P =.22), 2-years (−0.27 vs −0.01, P =.07) and 5 years (−0.21 vs 0.25, P =.051). Conclusion: Height was generally maintained in Crohn's disease, and impaired linear growth was rare in this cohort.
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- 2020
8. Endoscopic Versus Histological Disease Extent at Presentation of Paediatric Inflammatory Bowel Disease
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Bhumita Vadgama, Nadeem A. Afzal, R Mark Beattie, Sarah Ennis, James J. Ashton, Tracy Coelho, and Akshay Batra
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Pancolitis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Gastroenterology ,Rectum ,Ileum ,Disease ,medicine.disease ,Ulcerative colitis ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,Descending colon ,Endoscopy ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Internal medicine ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,medicine ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Background: The Paris classification (PC) of paediatric inflammatory bowel disease (PIBD) categorises disease extent and therefore impacts on treatment decisions Histological (microscopic) disease extent is not incorporated and endoscopic (macroscopic) findings may underrepresent disease extent when compared to histological findings; this study compares disease extent at presentation. Methods: Data were obtained of patients below 17 years of age diagnosed with IBD from 2010-13 at University Hospital Southampton. Data are presented as percentage of patients undergoing endoscopy. PC was performed alongside a modified PC by histological disease location. Results: 172 patients were identified (median age at diagnosis 13.5, 115 male); Crohns disease (CD)- 107, Ulcerative Colitis (UC)- 50, Inflammatory Bowel Disease Unclassified (IBDU)- 15; 159 had undergone upper GI endoscopy, 163 had undergone lower GI endoscopy. Histological disease was more extensive at all points for CD, UC and IBDU. CD; endoscopic ileal disease in 49% of patients compared to histological disease in 71.3%. Comparing PC; a 10% increase in L3 disease (ileocolonic), a 24% increase in L3+L4a disease (ileocolonic plus upper gastrointestinal (GI)) and a 27% increase in all upper GI involvement if histological disease extent was used. UC; the most common disease location was the rectum (endoscopic- 91.5% vs histological- 93.6%) and descending colon (endoscopic- 89.4% vs histological-95.7%). Comparing PC; a 19% increase in E4 disease (pancolitis) if histological disease extent was used. Conclusion: This data confirms that histological disease extent is greater than endoscopic disease extent. This should be considered when the PC is used. Further study is needed to elucidate which classification would better predict disease outcome.
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- 2016
9. Sa1121 COMPOUND HETEROZYGOTE TRIM22 VARIANTS ARE A POTENTIAL MODIFIER OF INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASE THROUGH DEFECTIVE MURAMYL DIPEPTIDE-MEDIATED ANTIMICROBIAL ACTIVITY
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Imogen S. Stafford, Tracy Coelho, Sumeet Pandey, R Mark Beattie, Sarah Ennis, Holm H. Uhlig, Enrico Mossotto, and James J. Ashton
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chemistry.chemical_compound ,Hepatology ,chemistry ,Gastroenterology ,medicine ,Pharmacology ,TRIM22 ,Compound heterozygosity ,medicine.disease ,Antimicrobial ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,Muramyl dipeptide - Published
- 2020
10. Increased prevalence of anti-TNF therapy in paediatric inflammatory bowel disease is associated with a decline in surgical resections during childhood
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Hang T.T. Phan, Michael Stanton, Robert Mark Beattie, Enrico Mossotto, Tracy Coelho, Akshay Batra, Nadeem A. Afzal, Sarah Ennis, James J. Ashton, and Florina Borca
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Disease ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,Cohort Studies ,Crohn Disease ,Internal medicine ,Prevalence ,Medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Colitis ,Child ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha ,Gastroenterology ,Infant ,medicine.disease ,Ulcerative colitis ,Natural history ,Child, Preschool ,Cohort ,Anti-TNF therapy ,Colitis, Ulcerative ,Female ,business ,Cohort study - Abstract
Background: anti-tumour necrosis factor-α (anti-TNF) therapy use has risen in paediatric-onset inflammatory bowel disease (PIBD). Whether this has translated into preventing/delaying childhood surgery is uncertain. The Wessex PIBD cohort were analysed for trends in anti-TNF-therapy and surgery. Design: all patients diagnosed with PIBD within Wessex from 1997-2017 were assessed. Prevalence of anti-TNF-therapy and yearly surgery rates (resection and perianal) during childhood (
- Published
- 2018
11. Endoscopic and Histological Assessment of Paediatric Inflammatory Bowel Disease Over a 3-Year Follow-up Period
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James J. Ashton, Quentin Bonduelle, Sarah Ennis, Robert Mark Beattie, Enrico Mossotto, Tracy Coelho, Akshay Batra, Bhumita Vadgama, and Nadeem A. Afzal
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,Gastroenterology ,Endoscopy, Gastrointestinal ,Disease course ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Crohn Disease ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Retrospective Studies ,Potential impact ,business.industry ,Stomach ,medicine.disease ,digestive system diseases ,Intestines ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Disease Progression ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Colitis, Ulcerative ,Female ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Discrepancies between inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) endoscopic/histological extent are documented at diagnosis. It is unclear whether these differences persist through disease course, with potential impact on categorization and management. We aimed to analyze the progression of disease over a 3-year period.Patients younger than 17 years, diagnosed between 2010 and 2013 at Southampton Children's Hospital and followed-up for 3 years were eligible. Primary outcome was disease extent at diagnosis and follow-up. Data are presented as percentage of patients undergoing endoscopy. Paris classification (PC) and PC using histological, rather than endoscopic disease, were determined.One hundred and twenty-five patients were included, 66 boys; Crohn's disease (CD) 74, ulcerative colitis (UC) 40, IBD unclassified (IBDU) 11. All had endoscopy at diagnosis. One hundred and two patients underwent ≥1 repeat endoscopies.Disease extent reduced from diagnosis to first follow-up endoscopy for both endoscopic and histological disease extent (CD/UC/IBDU, all P 0.00006). Histological extent remained greater than endoscopic in CD with significant differences in stomach, ileum, and large bowel at all follow-up points (P = 0.045). Endoscopic matched histological extent in UC/IBDU. Applying a modified PC resulted in significant changes for CD (L3 27.4%-53.2%, P = 0.006, L3 + L4A 21%-50%, P = 0.001, and upper gastrointestinal disease 50%-80.6%, P = 0.0006) but not UC. CD height (-0.37 to -0.25) and weight (-1.09 to -0.19) standard deviation scores increased from diagnosis to follow-up.Histological disease is greater than endoscopic extent at diagnosis and during follow-up in CD, although not in UC/IBDU. Classification of disease extent in CD should be based on both endoscopic and histological criteria.
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- 2017
12. 16S sequencing and functional analysis of the fecal microbiome during treatment of newly diagnosed pediatric inflammatory bowel disease
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David W. Cleary, Tracy Coelho, Rachel Haggarty, Karen P. Scott, R Mark Beattie, Akshay Batra, Catherine M. Colquhoun, Nadeem A. Afzal, Imke Mulder, James J. Ashton, and Sarah Ennis
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,16S ,Adolescent ,pediatrics ,Treatment outcome ,Observational Study ,microbiome ,Newly diagnosed ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,Gastroenterology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Feces ,0302 clinical medicine ,inflammatory bowel disease ,Internal medicine ,RNA, Ribosomal, 16S ,medicine ,Humans ,Microbiome ,Longitudinal Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Child ,Crohn's disease ,business.industry ,Sequence Analysis, RNA ,Siblings ,Crohn disease ,General Medicine ,Biodiversity ,medicine.disease ,Fatty Acids, Volatile ,Inflammatory Bowel Diseases ,Gastrointestinal Microbiome ,RNA, Bacterial ,030104 developmental biology ,Treatment Outcome ,Family medicine ,ComputingMethodologies_DOCUMENTANDTEXTPROCESSING ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Female ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
Supplemental Digital Content is available in the text, The human microbiome is of considerable interest to pediatric inflammatory bowel disease (PIBD) researchers with 1 potential mechanism for disease development being aberrant immune handling of the intestinal bacteria. This study analyses the fecal microbiome through treatment in newly diagnosed PIBD patients and compares to cohabiting siblings where possible. Patients were recruited on clinical suspicion of PIBD before diagnosis. Treatment-naïve fecal samples were collected, with further samples at 2 and 6 weeks into treatment. Samples underwent 16S ribosomal ribonucleic acid (RNA) gene sequencing and short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) analysis, results were analyzed using quantitative-insights-into-microbial-ecology. Six PIBD patients were included in the cohort: 4 Crohn disease (CD), 1 ulcerative colitis (UC), 1 inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) unclassified, and median age 12.6 (range 10–15.1 years); 3 patients had an unaffected healthy sibling recruited. Microbial diversity (observed species/Chao1/Shannon diversity) was reduced in treatment-naïve patients compared to siblings and patients in remission. Principal coordinate analysis using Bray–Curtis dissimilarity and UniFrac revealed microbial shifts in CD over the treatment course. In treatment-naïve PIBD, there was reduction in functional ability for amino acid metabolism and carbohydrate handling compared to controls (P = .038) and patients in remission (P = .027). Metabolic function returned to normal after remission was achieved. SCFA revealed consistent detection of lactate in treatment-naïve samples. This study adds in-depth 16S rRNA sequencing analysis on a small longitudinal cohort to the literature and includes sibling controls and patients with UC/IBD unclassified. It highlights the initial dysbiosis, reduced diversity, altered functional potential, and subsequent shifts in bacteria from diagnosis over time to remission.
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- 2017
13. Classification of Paediatric Inflammatory Bowel Disease using Machine Learning
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James J. Ashton, Enrico Mossotto, Robert Mark Beattie, Sarah Ennis, Ben D. MacArthur, and Tracy Coelho
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Disease subtype ,Adolescent ,Science ,Disease ,Machine learning ,computer.software_genre ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,Article ,Machine Learning ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cluster Analysis ,Humans ,Medicine ,Effective treatment ,Child ,Multidisciplinary ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Age Factors ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Reproducibility of Results ,Models, Theoretical ,Inflammatory Bowel Diseases ,medicine.disease ,Ulcerative colitis ,030104 developmental biology ,ROC Curve ,Child, Preschool ,Cohort ,Unsupervised learning ,Female ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Supervised Machine Learning ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,computer ,Unsupervised Machine Learning - Abstract
Paediatric inflammatory bowel disease (PIBD), comprising Crohn’s disease (CD), ulcerative colitis (UC) and inflammatory bowel disease unclassified (IBDU) is a complex and multifactorial condition with increasing incidence. An accurate diagnosis of PIBD is necessary for a prompt and effective treatment. This study utilises machine learning (ML) to classify disease using endoscopic and histological data for 287 children diagnosed with PIBD. Data were used to develop, train, test and validate a ML model to classify disease subtype. Unsupervised models revealed overlap of CD/UC with broad clustering but no clear subtype delineation, whereas hierarchical clustering identified four novel subgroups characterised by differing colonic involvement. Three supervised ML models were developed utilising endoscopic data only, histological only and combined endoscopic/histological data yielding classification accuracy of 71.0%, 76.9% and 82.7% respectively. The optimal combined model was tested on a statistically independent cohort of 48 PIBD patients from the same clinic, accurately classifying 83.3% of patients. This study employs mathematical modelling of endoscopic and histological data to aid diagnostic accuracy. While unsupervised modelling categorises patients into four subgroups, supervised approaches confirm the need of both endoscopic and histological evidence for an accurate diagnosis. Overall, this paper provides a blueprint for ML use with clinical data.
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- 2017
14. Exome Analysis of Rare and Common Variants within the NOD Signaling Pathway
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Matthew Mort, Akshay Batra, Nadeem A. Afzal, R Mark Beattie, Gaia Andreoletti, Valentina Shakhnovich, Tracy Coelho, Rachel Haggarty, Sarah Ennis, Kathy Christenson, and Britt-Sabina Petersen
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Adolescent ,Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases ,Nod2 Signaling Adaptor Protein ,Disease ,Biology ,Bioinformatics ,medicine.disease_cause ,Models, Biological ,Article ,Inhibitor of Apoptosis Proteins ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,NOD2 ,Exome Sequencing ,medicine ,Humans ,Gene family ,Exome ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Child ,Gene ,Mutation ,Multidisciplinary ,Genetic Variation ,Infant ,Inflammatory Bowel Diseases ,3. Good health ,030104 developmental biology ,Case-Control Studies ,Child, Preschool ,Cohort ,Nod Signaling Adaptor Proteins ,Mutation testing ,Female ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Pediatric inflammatory bowel disease (pIBD) is a chronic heterogeneous disorder. This study looks at the burden of common and rare coding mutations within 41 genes comprising the NOD signaling pathway in pIBD patients. 136 pIBD and 106 control samples underwent whole-exome sequencing. We compared the burden of common, rare and private mutation between these two groups using the SKAT-O test. An independent replication cohort of 33 cases and 111 controls was used to validate significant findings. We observed variation in 40 of 41 genes comprising the NOD signaling pathway. Four genes were significantly associated with disease in the discovery cohort (BIRC2 p = 0.004, NFKB1 p = 0.005, NOD2 p = 0.029 and SUGT1 p = 0.047). Statistical significance was replicated for BIRC2 (p = 0.041) and NOD2 (p = 0.045) in an independent validation cohort. A gene based test on the combined discovery and replication cohort confirmed association for BIRC2 (p = 0.030). We successfully applied burden of mutation testing that jointly assesses common and rare variants, identifying two previously implicated genes (NFKB1 and NOD2) and confirmed a possible role in disease risk in a previously unreported gene (BIRC2). The identification of this novel gene provides a wider role for the inhibitor of apoptosis gene family in IBD pathogenesis.
- Published
- 2017
15. Immuno-Genomic Profiling of Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease
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Akshay Batra, Tracy Coelho, Yifang Gao, Ananth Ramakrishnan, Robert Mark Beattie, Reuben J. Pengelly, James J. Ashton, Gaia Andreoletti, Anthony P. Williams, and Sarah Ennis
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Candidate gene ,Genotype ,In silico ,Gastroenterology ,High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing ,Genomics ,Genome-wide association study ,Biology ,Inflammatory Bowel Diseases ,Prognosis ,Bioinformatics ,medicine.disease ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,Genome ,Meta-Analysis as Topic ,Genetic variation ,medicine ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Biomarkers ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Genetic association - Abstract
Background: Over the last 2 decades, there has been an ever-expanding catalog of genetic variants implicated in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) through genome-wide association studies and next generation sequencing. In this article, we highlight the remarkable developments in understanding the genetic and immunological basis of IBD. The main objective of the study was to perform a systematic review of published literature detailing functional/ immunological studies in patients known to harbor genetic variations in the implicated genes. Methods: A panel of 71 candidate genes implicated in IBD was prioritized using 5 network connectivity in silico methods. An electronic search using MEDLINE and EMBASE from 1996 to February 2014 for each of the selected genes was conducted. Only studies describing genotyped IBD cohorts with concurrent in vivo functional studies were included. Results: Between the reviewers, a total of 35,142 potentially eligible publications were identified. Only 8 genes had publications meeting the inclusion criteria. A total of 67 studies were identified across the selected genes. The NOD2 gene had the most number with 41 studies followed by IL-10 with 11 eligible studies. A meta-analysis was not practical given the heterogeneity of the study design and the number of implicated genes with diverse immunological and physiological functions. Conclusions: There is a clear lack of functional studies in humans to assess the in vivo impact of the various genetic variants implicated. A collaborative approach merging genomics and functional studies will help to unravel the obscure mechanisms involved in IBD. (Inflamm Bowel Dis 2014;20:1813–1819)
- Published
- 2014
16. 759 – Significant Variants in Monogenic Inflammatory Bowel Disease Genes Identified by Whole Exome Sequencing of 400 Paediatric Patients
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Matthew Mort, Nadeem A. Afzal, R Mark Beattie, Enrico Mossotto, Tracy Coelho, Sarah Ennis, James J. Ashton, Imogen S. Stafford, and Akshay Batra
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Hepatology ,business.industry ,Gastroenterology ,Medicine ,Bioinformatics ,business ,medicine.disease ,Gene ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,Exome sequencing ,Paediatric patients - Published
- 2019
17. P744 A significant decline in surgical resections during childhood with increased prevalence of anti-TNF therapy in patients with paediatric inflammatory bowel disease
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James J. Ashton, Nadeem A. Afzal, Robert Mark Beattie, Michael Stanton, H Phan, Sarah Ennis, Akshay Batra, Tracy Coelho, Enrico Mossotto, and Florina Borca
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Gastroenterology ,medicine ,Anti-TNF therapy ,In patient ,General Medicine ,business ,medicine.disease ,Inflammatory bowel disease - Published
- 2019
18. Crohn's supraglottitis – The presenting feature of otherwise asymptomatic systemic disease
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Hasnaa Ismail-Koch, Robert Mark Beattie, A. Burgess, Steven Frampton, Darren J. Fowler, S.E. Price, S. Holden, and Tracy Coelho
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Larynx ,Systemic disease ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Disease ,Airway obstruction ,medicine.disease ,Asymptomatic ,Gastroenterology ,Dermatology ,digestive system diseases ,Infliximab ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Internal medicine ,Granuloma ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Supraglottitis ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We present the unique case of a 15 year old boy with upper airway obstruction found to have Crohn's disease in the absence of gastrointestinal symptoms. Laryngeal manifestations of Crohn's disease are extremely rare. Only 11 cases have been reported in the literature, of which only one is in a child. Laryngeal Crohn's disease usually occurs accompanied by gastrointestinal symptoms or in patients with a prior diagnosis of Crohn's disease. The literature on the clinical features and management of laryngeal Crohn's is discussed along with a summary of the reported otolaryngological manifestations and associations with Crohn's disease.
- Published
- 2013
19. Current status of immunosuppressive agents for solid organ transplantation in children
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Tracy Coelho, Michael Tredger, and Anil Dhawan
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Transplantation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Everolimus ,Basiliximab ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunosuppression ,Organ transplantation ,surgical procedures, operative ,Daclizumab ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Immunology ,medicine ,Alemtuzumab ,Intensive care medicine ,Solid organ transplantation ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Immunosuppression after organ transplantation is complex and ever evolving. Over the past two decades, newer immunosuppressive agents have been introduced with an aim to provide better patient and graft survival. Improved therapeutic strategies have been developed offering the option to use combinations of drugs with non-overlapping toxicities. There are, however, only a few clinical studies with robust data to rationalize the use of these agents in children. This review will discuss the newer immunosuppressive agents used for solid organ transplant, their current status in post-transplant management and prevention of allograft rejection.
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- 2012
20. Is the incidence of paediatric inflammatory bowel disease still increasing?
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Nadeem A. Afzal, Tracy Coelho, R Mark Beattie, Akshay Batra, James J. Ashton, and Mick Cullen
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Databases, Factual ,Referral ,Population ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,Age Distribution ,0302 clinical medicine ,Gastro ,030225 pediatrics ,Statistical analyses ,Epidemiology ,Humans ,Medicine ,Age of Onset ,Child ,education ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Inflammatory Bowel Diseases ,medicine.disease ,England ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,business ,Needs Assessment - Abstract
There has been an increase in the incidence of paediatric inflammatory bowel disease (PIBD) over the last 20 years.1 2 We have previously published data from Wessex, England, reporting an incidence of 9.37/100 000/year (2008–2012), which significantly increased from 5.2/100 000/year in 1998–1999, 6.39/100 000/year in 2002–2006, and 7.82/100 000/year in 2003–2008.1 2 We now report the most recent disease incidence figures for Wessex, England (1 January 2013 to 31 December 2017) and analyse them with previously published Wessex data (1 January 2002 to 21 December 2012) demonstrating the most contemporary incidence and the trend over 16 years. The ‘Wessex’ population was estimated from the Office for National Statistics using defined postcodes, based on the contemporary referral area.1 3 Statistical analyses of the data were conducted …
- Published
- 2018
21. Presenting phenotype of paediatric inflammatory bowel disease in Wessex, Southern England 2010-2013
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Sarah Ennis, Akshay Batra, Robert Mark Beattie, James J. Ashton, Tracy Coelho, and Nadeem A. Afzal
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Male ,Pancolitis ,Crohn's disease ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Abdominal pain ,Time Factors ,Adolescent ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,General Medicine ,Disease ,medicine.disease ,Inflammatory Bowel Diseases ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,Gastroenterology ,Ulcerative colitis ,England ,Weight loss ,Internal medicine ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,medicine ,Humans ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
There has been at least a twofold increase in the incidence of paediatric inflammatory bowel disease (PIBD) over the last 20 years; we report the presenting features from 2010 to 2013 and compare with previous data.All patients diagnosed with PIBD at University Hospitals Southampton from 2010 to 2013 were identified from an in-house database. Data were obtained from paper and electronic notes. Height, weight and BMI SDS are presented as median values (95% CI).One hundred and seventy-two patients were included (median age at diagnosis 13.5, 115 male); Crohn's disease (CD) - 107, UC - 50, inflammatory bowel disease unclassified (IBDU) - 15. The most common presenting features of CD were abdominal pain (86%), diarrhoea (78.5%) and weight loss (56.1%); 42.1% of patients had all three. In UC blood in stool (92%), diarrhoea (92%) and abdominal pain (88%) were the most common; all three in 76% of patients. CD presented with ileocolonic disease in 52.5%. UC presented with pancolitis in 64%. There was growth delay in CD: height -0.37 (-0.60 to -0.14); weight -1.09 (-1.35 to -0.83). Growth was maintained in UC: height 0.53 (0.19 to 0.87); weight 0.14 (-0.20 to 0.48).Paediatric inflammatory bowel disease phenotype remains as extensive despite increasing incidence. Although the classical phenotype is common, a reasonable proportion present with atypical features, normal growth and normal blood markers.
- Published
- 2015
22. Current status of immunosuppressive agents for solid organ transplantation in children
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Tracy, Coelho, Michael, Tredger, and Anil, Dhawan
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Graft Rejection ,Sirolimus ,Daclizumab ,Recombinant Fusion Proteins ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Organ Transplantation ,Mycophenolic Acid ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,Tacrolimus ,Basiliximab ,Immunoglobulin G ,Humans ,Everolimus ,Child ,Alemtuzumab ,Immunosuppressive Agents ,Antilymphocyte Serum ,Muromonab-CD3 - Abstract
Immunosuppression after organ transplantation is complex and ever evolving. Over the past two decades, newer immunosuppressive agents have been introduced with an aim to provide better patient and graft survival. Improved therapeutic strategies have been developed offering the option to use combinations of drugs with non-overlapping toxicities. There are, however, only a few clinical studies with robust data to rationalize the use of these agents in children. This review will discuss the newer immunosuppressive agents used for solid organ transplant, their current status in post-transplant management and prevention of allograft rejection.
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- 2012
23. G371(P) Presenting phenotype of crohn’s disease (cd) in children 2010–13: Abstract G371(P) Table 1
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Robert Mark Beattie, Sarah Ennis, Akshay Batra, Nadeem A. Afzal, James J. Ashton, and Tracy Coelho
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Crohn's disease ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Disease ,medicine.disease ,Gastroenterology ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,Surgery ,Internal medicine ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Cohort ,medicine ,Normal growth ,Family history ,business ,Colonic disease - Abstract
Aims There has been at least a two-fold increase in the incidence of paediatric-onset CD over the last 20 years; there are few recent reports of the presenting phenotype – symptoms, inflammatory markers and disease extent. We report the presenting features of a defined cohort and compare to previous data. Methods Patients diagnosed with CD at University Hospitals Southampton from 2010–2013 were identified from an in-house database. Data were obtained from note review using a standardised proforma and compared to previous UK data. 1 Weight and height at diagnosis are presented as median SDS (95% CI). Results 106 children were included. Median age 13.80 (Range 4.40–17.32 years), 79 male. The most common presenting features are seen in Table 1. The majority of patients presented with ileocolonic disease (51%) or isolated colonic disease (32%). Twenty-eight patients (26.4%) had perianal signs (5.7% abscesses/fistulae). Inflammatory markers were raised at diagnosis-median CRP 18.0 mg/L (8.9–27.1), ESR24.0 mm/hr (19.6–28.4); however normal inflammatory markers were frequently seen-normal CRP 26.4%, ESR 18.2%. Weight SDS was –1.088 (–1.35 to –0.83), 52% patients were below –1 standard deviation (SD). Height SDS was –0.366 (–0.60 to –0.14). 26.5% of patients were between –1 and –2 SD from the median and 4.8% were below –2 SD. Family history (3 rd degree relative or closer) of IBD was seen in 27.6%. Conclusion Despite an increase in incidence of CD there does not appear to be an accrual of milder cases of disease. A significant number of patients will present with both normal growth and normal inflammatory markers. Reference Sawczenko A. Presenting features of inflammatory bowel disease in Great Britain and Ireland. Arch Dis Child. 2003;88(11):995–1000
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- 2015
24. Exome Analysis of Patients with Concurrent Pediatric Inflammatory Bowel Disease and Autoimmune Disease
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Claire Willis, Nadeem A. Afzal, Jane Gibson, Rachel Haggarty, James J. Ashton, Akshay Batra, John W. Holloway, Robert Mark Beattie, Tracy Coelho, Sarah Ennis, and Gaia Andreoletti
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Male ,Chronic condition ,Adolescent ,Original Basic Science Articles ,Egg protein ,Genome-wide association study ,Comorbidity ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,autoimmune disorders ,Autoimmune Diseases ,Cohort Studies ,Crohn Disease ,pediatric inflammatory bowel disease ,medicine ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,genetics ,Exome ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Child ,Genetic association ,Receptors, Interleukin-1 Type I ,Autoimmune disease ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Egg Proteins ,Gastroenterology ,Membrane Proteins ,Nuclear Proteins ,asthma ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,Interleukin-2 Receptor beta Subunit ,Glutathione S-Transferase pi ,Mutation ,Immunology ,Colitis, Ulcerative ,Female ,business ,exome sequencing ,Interleukin-18 Receptor alpha Subunit - Abstract
Article first published online 17 April 2015. Supplemental Digital Content is Available in the Text., Background: Pediatric Inflammatory Bowel Disease (PIBD) is a chronic condition seen in genetically predisposed individuals. Genome-wide association studies have implicated >160 genomic loci in IBD with many genes coding for proteins in key immune pathways. This study looks at autoimmune disease burden in patients diagnosed with PIBD and interrogates exome data of a subset of patients. Methods: Patients were recruited from the Southampton Genetics of PIBD cohort. Clinical diagnosis of autoimmune disease in these individuals was ascertained from medical records. For a subset of patients with PIBD and concurrent asthma, exome data was interrogated to ascertain the burden of pathogenic variants within genes implicated in asthma. Association testing was conducted between cases and population controls using the SKAT-O test. Results: Forty-nine (28.3%) PIBD children (18.49% CD, 8.6% UC, and 21.15% IBDU patients) had a concurrent clinical diagnosis of at least one other autoimmune disorder; asthma was the most prevalent, affecting 16.2% of the PIBD cohort. Rare and common variant association testing revealed 6 significant genes (P < 0.05) before Bonferroni adjustment. Three of these genes were previously implicated in both asthma and IBD (ZPBP2 IL1R1, and IL18R1) and 3 in asthma only (PYHIN1, IL2RB, and GSTP1). Conclusions: One-third of our cohort had a concurrent autoimmune condition. We observed higher incidence of asthma compared with the overall pediatric prevalence. Despite a small sample size, SKAT-O evaluated a significant burden of rare and common mutations in 6 genes. Variant burden suggests that a systemic immune dysregulation rather than organ-specific could underpin immune dysfunction for a subset of patients.
- Published
- 2015
25. Use of Laparoscope as Rigid Enteroscope in Blue Rubber Bleb Naevus Syndrome
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Assad M. Butt, Anies Mahomed, Aroonkumar Chouhan, Tracy Coelho, Stephen D. Adams, and Rebecca Lisle
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medicine.medical_specialty ,URETEROSCOPE ,genetic structures ,business.industry ,small bowel ,haemangioma ,laparoscope ,blue rubber bleb naevus syndrome ,Medicine ,business ,Blue rubber bleb naevus syndrome ,eye diseases ,Surgery ,Resection - Abstract
Management of bleeding multiple haemangiomata within the gastrointestinal tract is a surgical challenge in this case of Blue Rubber Bleb Naevus Syndrome (BRBNS). Described is a novel use of the laparoscope as a rigid enteroscope in order to provide intraluminal imaging for successful lesional resection from small bowel.
- Published
- 2011
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