The Hamilton Spectator

Crohn’s study hopes to find predictive test

Largest-ever inflammato­ry bowel disease study involves 5,000 participan­ts around the world

- SHERYL UBELACKER

TORONTO — With three brothers affected by either Crohn’s disease or ulcerative colitis, Kathleen Crispi knows she is at high risk of developing one of the literally gut-wrenching conditions known to run in families.

So about a year ago, she volunteere­d to take part in the largesteve­r study of inflammato­ry bowel disease (IBD) — research that hopes to unlock the underlying cause of Crohn’s, with the ultimate goal of finding cures for both major forms of the condition.

The Canadian-led, internatio­nal Genetic, Environmen­tal, Microbial (GEM) project has just reached its target enrolment of 5,000 participan­ts around the world, all unaffected children or siblings of people with either Crohn’s or colitis.

As its name suggests, the study is taking a multiprong­ed approach to discoverin­g what triggers underlie the developmen­t of the disease in the hopes of designing a predictive test and ultimately treatments to prevent its occurrence.

“Even getting to a stage of having biological markers or being able to identify people who are likely to develop the disease ... would be a really big win out of this study,” said Crispi of Guelph, who has two brothers with ulcerative colitis and one with Crohn’s. An aunt on her mother’s side of the family also has colitis.

“Obviously, we know it runs in families,” said Crispi, 32. “I have two young children and I have two nephews and a niece, as well, so for us anything that would lead to earlier detection would be fantastic.

“But, of course, a cure would be amazing.”

Crohn’s and ulcerative colitis are auto-immune diseases which cause inflammati­on of the lining of the gastrointe­stinal tract, disrupting the body’s ability to digest food, absorb nutrition and properly eliminate waste. Symptoms include abdominal pain, cramping, gas, bloating, fatigue and diarrhea.

With Crohn’s, inflammati­on can occur anywhere in the GI tract but is usually present in the lower part of the small intestine and the colon, or large bowel. Ulcerative colitis affects only the colon, including the rectum and anus.

About 250,000 Canadians have IBD, which affects an estimated 10 million people worldwide. And its incidence is on the rise, said Mina Mawani, president and CEO of Crohn’s and Colitis Canada.

“These people have unbelievab­le pain, they have bloody diarrhea, they could be going to the bathroom up to 20 times a day,” said Mawani. “People feel that there’s a lot of stigma associated with a bathroom disease, so they don’t speak about it very often.

“But if you have to go to the washroom 20 times a day ... you may not want to go to events, you may not be able to hold down a job. And if you do, you need to be close to a bathroom.

“It really is a socially isolating disease.”

Medication­s and in some cases surgery to remove chronicall­y inflamed portions of the intestines can help keep IBD under control in 50 to 60 per cent of cases, “but we still haven’t cured anyone,” said Dr. Ken Croitoru, principal investigat­or of the GEM study, which began recruiting participan­ts 10 years ago.

The project — being carried out in 107 sites worldwide, including 25 in Canada — has collected in-depth health data from participan­ts along with blood, urine and stool samples.

Researcher­s are tracking subjects’ diet, immune function and changes in their intestinal microbiome, as well as trying to decode any genetic anomalies and potential environmen­tal factors that may end up sparking the disease.

Since 2008, when the study began, 70 participan­ts have gone on to develop Crohn’s, while 15 have been diagnosed with ulcerative colitis, said Croitoru, a gastroente­rologist at the Mount Sinai Inflammato­ry Bowel Disease Centre in Toronto.

“That gives us the opportunit­y to go back and say ‘OK, what was there when they were healthy that distinguis­hes those 70 from the rest of the crowd?’” he said.

While genetics is known to play a role in IBD, researcher­s are paying particular attention to each person’s gut microbiome, the natural bacterial community inhabiting the gastrointe­stinal tract that aids digestion, helps regulate the immune system and protects against disease-causing microbes.

“There’s something there that seems to be important in triggering the disease,” said Croitoru, speculatin­g that some as-yetunknown factor may alter the microbiome, leading to abnormal activation of immune cells.

“We think that’s where the action is,” he said. “We think there’s something that’s changed the microbiome that has affected the way the immune response works, and instead of having a normal relationsh­ip like most people have, the immune response goes haywire and begins to cause inflammati­on, which damages the gut.

“The idea is that to understand how that changes, you have to look at it before the disease can set in, before everything is so bad and the fire’s raging so you can’t tell where the fire started.”

The GEM study has received more than $15 million in funding from Crohn’s and Colitis Canada and the Helmsley Charitable Trust in the United States. The two groups recently announced an additional $6.4 million in funding, allowing for continuati­on of the project.

 ?? HANNAH YOON THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Kathleen Crispi of Guelph is taking part in the largest-ever study of inflammato­ry bowel disease because her three brothers are affected by either Crohn’s disease or ulcerative colitis.
HANNAH YOON THE CANADIAN PRESS Kathleen Crispi of Guelph is taking part in the largest-ever study of inflammato­ry bowel disease because her three brothers are affected by either Crohn’s disease or ulcerative colitis.

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