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Journal of Clinical and Cellular Immunology

Journal of Clinical and Cellular Immunology
Open Access

ISSN: 2155-9899

+44 1223 790975

Abstract

The Influence of Innate and Adaptive Immunity on Crohn’s Disease Severity

Neville Azzopardi, Keith Sacco and Godfrey Grech

Stricturing and penetrating disease are classified as severe Crohn’s disease types and are frequently associated with an increased risk for bowel surgery. Research has shown that early treatment with aggressive immunosuppression (including biological and thiopurine therapies – the so-called “top-down approach”) results in a diminished risk of developing these complicated disease types. However, these therapies carry significant risks and cost. Being able to predict which patients are at an increased risk of developing severe Crohn’s disease may enable us to treat patients individually, with the aggressive “top-down approach” started at diagnosis in patients with a significantly increased risk of developing complicated disease types. Defects of innate and adaptive immunity both play a role in Crohn’s disease pathophysiology. Identifying whether defects of innate immunity (through gene mutations) or adaptive immunity (through antibodies to microbial antigens) are associated with stricturing/penetrating disease types may enable us to predict the course of the disease and therefore decide on who would benefit most from the “top-down approach”. This review discusses the role of NOD2 and other gene polymorphisms in predicting Crohn’s disease severity. It also highlights the evidence linking the role of the various antibodies involved in adaptive immunity (ASCA, OmpC, GM-CSF) and complicated Crohn’s disease types.

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