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Relationship between pouch microbiota and pouchitis following restorative proctocolectomy for ulcerative colitis
Authors:Imerio Angriman  Marco Scarpa  Ignazio Castagliuolo
Affiliation:Imerio Angriman, Department of Surgery, Gastroenterology and Oncology, University of Padova, 35128 Padova, ItalyMarco Scarpa, Surgical Oncology Unit, Veneto Institute of Oncology (IOV-IRCCS), 35128 Padova, ItalyIgnazio Castagliuolo, Department of Molecular Medicine, University of Padova, 35128 Padova, Italy
Abstract:Restorative proctocolectomy with ileal pouch-anal anastomosis (IPAA) has become the surgical treatment of choice for many patients with medically refractory ulcerative colitis (UC) and familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP). UC patients with IPAA (UC-IPAA) are, nevertheless, susceptible to inflammatory and noninflammatory sequelae such as pouchitis, which is only rarely noted in FAP patients with IPAA. Pouchitis is the most frequent long-term complication of UC-IPAA patients, with a cumulative prevalence of up to 50%. Although the aetiology of pouchitis remains unclear, accumulating evidence suggests that a dysbiosis of the pouch microbiota and an abnormal mucosal immune response are implicated in its pathogenesis. Studies using culture and molecular techniques have detected a dysbiosis of the pouch microbiota in patients with pouchitis. Risk factors, genetic associations, and serological markers suggest that interactions between the host immune response and the pouch microbiota underlie the aetiology of this idiopathic inflammatory condition. This systematic review focuses on the dysbiosis of the microbiota that inhabit the pouch in UC and FAP patients and its interaction with the mucosal immune system. A meta-analysis was not attempted due to the highly heterogeneous microbiota composition and the different detection methods used by the various studies. Although no specific bacterial species, genus, or family has as yet been identified as pathogenic, there is evidence that a dysbiosis characterized by decreased gut microbiota diversity in UC-IPAA patients may, in genetically predisposed subjects, lead to aberrant mucosal immune regulation triggering an inflammatory process.
Keywords:Pouchitis   Inflammation of the ileal pouch   Microbiota   Bacteria   Microbiome   Ileal-pouch-anal anastomosis   Ulcerative colitis   Crohn’s disease   Inflammatory bowel disease
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