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Published in: Digestive Diseases and Sciences 4/2012

Open Access 01-04-2012 | Original Article

NOD2 Polymorphism Predicts Response to Treatment in Crohn’s Disease—First Steps to a Personalized Therapy

Authors: Jan Hendrik Niess, Jochen Klaus, Johannes Stephani, Carolin Pflüger, Nadine Degenkolb, Ulrike Spaniol, Benjamin Mayer, Georgia Lahr, Georg B. T. von Boyen

Published in: Digestive Diseases and Sciences | Issue 4/2012

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Abstract

Background and Aims

Great efforts have been made to predict disease behavior over time and the response to treatment in Crohn’s disease (CD). Such understanding could personalize therapy. Early introduction of more aggressive therapies to patients at high risk and no introduction of predictable refractory treatments could become possible. We hence tested the influence of the NOD2 carrier status on treatment response.

Patients and Methods

In 185 CD patients (age 45 ± 9.8 years, female n = 108, minimum disease duration 10 years), the three most common polymorphisms (p.Arg702Trp, p.Gly908Arg, p.Leu1007fsX1008) of NOD2 were tested by polymerase chain reaction and sequencing. Detailed clinical and medical history were obtained with a standardized questionnaire and by reviewing the medical charts. Treatments introduced were chosen by physicians blinded to genotype data.

Results

The frequency of the NOD2 variant allele was about one-third (67, 30.2%) of CD patients. NOD2 carriers were more often treated with systemic and locally active steroids and with an immunosuppressant (Azathioprine/6-MP). NOD2 mutation carrier status was more often associated with systemic steroid [8.9% vs. wild-type (WT) 1.2%, P = 0.0086] and local-steroid refractory (14.9% vs. WT 3.5%; P = 0.001). The WT patients were significantly higher refractory to immunosuppressant (12.8% vs. NOD2 carriers, 0.5%, P = 0.03). Most WT patients were treated with TNF-α antagonists and remission rates were significantly higher in this group after 1 year of treatment (84% vs. NOD2 carriers, 33%, P = 0.07).

Conclusions

The study presents first hints for the NOD2 carrier status to be predictive for response to therapy. A higher percentage of CD patients with NOD2 mutation carrier status was steroid refractory but could be treated well with immunosuppressants. The WT status showed a higher response to steroids and remission rates within 1 year of anti-TNF-α therapy. On the way to personalized medicine, this approach should be further investigated in larger studies.
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Metadata
Title
NOD2 Polymorphism Predicts Response to Treatment in Crohn’s Disease—First Steps to a Personalized Therapy
Authors
Jan Hendrik Niess
Jochen Klaus
Johannes Stephani
Carolin Pflüger
Nadine Degenkolb
Ulrike Spaniol
Benjamin Mayer
Georgia Lahr
Georg B. T. von Boyen
Publication date
01-04-2012
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Digestive Diseases and Sciences / Issue 4/2012
Print ISSN: 0163-2116
Electronic ISSN: 1573-2568
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10620-011-1977-3

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