Defective acute inflammation in Crohn's disease: A clinical investigation

Daniel J.B. Marks, Marcus W.N. Harbord, Raymond MacAllister, Farooq Z. Rahman, Jodi Young, Bissan Al-Lazikani, William Lees, Marco Novelli, Stuart Bloom, Anthony W. Segal

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

344 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: The cause of Crohn's disease has not been mechanistically proven. We tested the hypothesis that the disease is a form of immunodeficiency caused by impaired innate immunity. Methods: We investigated inflammatory responses in patients and controls by quantifying neutrophil recruitment and cytokine production after acute trauma, interleukin 8 secretion by cultured monocyte-derived macrophages after exposure to inflammatory mediators, and local inflammatory and vascular changes in response to subcutaneous injection of heat-killed Escherichia coli. Findings: In patients with Crohn's disease, trauma to rectum, ileum, or skin led to abnormally low neutrophil accumulation (differences from healthy individuals of 79%, n=8, p=0·0003; 57%, n=3, p=0·05; 50%, n=13, p<0·0001, respectively) and lower production of proinflammatory interleukin 8 (63%, n=7, p=0·003; 63%, n=3, p=0·05; 45%, n=8, p<0·0001) and interleukin 1β (50%, n=8, p=0·0005). Interleukin 8 secretion by cultured macrophages was reduced after exposure to acute wound fluid (38%, n=50, p<0·0001), C5a (48%, n=41, p=0·0005), or tumour necrosis factor α (52%, n=27, p<0·0001). Local inflammatory reaction to inoculation with E coli was attenuated, as quantified by changes in bloodflow (ileal disease 50%, n=6, p=0·01; colonic disease 77%, n=6, p=0·0003). This response was mediated by nitric oxide in controls, was increased by sildenafil in patients, and was not related to CARD15 genotype. Interpretation: In Crohn's disease, a constitutionally weak immune response predisposes to accumulation of intestinal contents that breach the mucosal barrier of the bowel wall, resulting in granuloma formation and chronic inflammation. Polymorphisms in CARD15 do not underlie this phenotype, but incapacitate the NOD2 pathway that can compensate for impairment of innate inflammation. Current treatment of secondary chronic inflammation might exaggerate the underlying lesion and promote chronic disease.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)668-678
Number of pages11
JournalLancet
Volume367
Issue number9511
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 25 2006
Externally publishedYes

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Medicine

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Defective acute inflammation in Crohn's disease: A clinical investigation'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this