Small Bowel Motility Quantified by Cine MRI to Predict Longer-Term Response in Patients with Crohn's Disease Commencing Biological Therapy: The Motility Study.
Andrew A Plumb, Gordon Moran, Kashfia Chowdhury, Norin Ahmed, Sue Philpott, Tariq Ahmad, Stuart Bloom, Ailsa Hart, Ilan Jacobs, Alex Menys, Peter Mooney, Damian Tolan, Simon Travis, Anisha Bhagwanani, Gauraang Bhatnagar, Darren Boone, James Franklin, Anmol Gangi-Burton, Maira Hameed, Emma Helbren, Faraz Hosseini-Ardehali, Rachel Hyland, Yakup Kilic, Shankar Kumar, Hannah Lambie, Maryam Mohsin, Anisha Patel, Safi Rahman, Naomi Sakai, Harbir Sidhu, Elen Thomson, Saiam Ahmed, Uday Bannur Chikkeragowda, Nina Barratt, Teresita Beeston, Heather Fitzke, Nicola Gibbons, Edmund Godfrey, Arun Gupta, Antony Higginson, Elizabeth Isaac, Klaartje Bel Kok, Sarah Langlands, Miles Parkes, Jaymin Patel, Kamal Patel, Kamini Patel, Nishant Patodi, Richard Pollok, Robert Przemiosolo, Charlotte Robinson, Nora Thoua, Anvi Wadke, Steve Halligan, Stuart A Taylor
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Small bowel Crohn's disease (SBCD) is increasingly treated with biological therapies. Predicting response or remission (RoR) for individual patients is difficult and complicates treatment strategy. We aimed to determine if motility magnetic resonance imaging (mMRI) is superior to CRP and fecal calprotectin (FC) for the prediction of RoR at 1 year in patients commencing biologics for SBCD.
Methods: Prospective, multicenter (n = 13) cohort study of patients with active non-stricturing SBCD requiring anti-TNFα or anti-IL-12/23 treatment. We measured mMRI and CRP at baseline and post-induction (visit 2: 12-30 weeks), and FC in a subset. RoR was assessed at 1 year using clinical and structural magnetic resonance enterography parameters. We compared sensitivity, specificity, and area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (ROC-AUC) of changes in mMRI and CRP to predict RoR at 1 year. Secondary outcomes compared mMRI with FC, and prediction of improved quality of life (QoL).
Results: Eighty-six participants completed all assessments. Stable or improved mMRI at visit 2 was more sensitive than normalization of CRP for RoR (mMRI:71.0%, 95%CI 52.0-85.8; CRP:45.2%, 95%CI 27.3-64.0%, P = .008) but less specific (mMRI:30.9%, 95%CI 19.1-44.8; CRP:67.3%, 95%CI 53.3-79.3%, P < .001). There was no significant difference in ROC-AUC (mMRI:0.48; CRP:0.53, P = .65). Similar results were obtained for FC. None of mMRI, CRP, or FC predicted patient QoL at 1 year.
Conclusions: Although improved mMRI is more sensitive than CRP and FC to predict RoR at 1 year, it is less specific. No factor predicted patient QoL. Motility MRI remains a marker of disease activity at given timepoints.
期刊介绍:
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases® supports the mission of the Crohn''s & Colitis Foundation by bringing the most impactful and cutting edge clinical topics and research findings related to inflammatory bowel diseases to clinicians and researchers working in IBD and related fields. The Journal is committed to publishing on innovative topics that influence the future of clinical care, treatment, and research.