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Validation and Optimization of an Ex Vivo Assay of Intestinal Mucosal Biopsies in Crohn’s Disease: Reflects Inflammation and Drug Effects

Crohn’s disease (CD) is a chronic illness demanding better therapeutics. The marketed biologics only benefit some patients or elicit diminishing effect over time. To complement the known methods in drug development and to obtain patient specific drug responses, we optimized and validated a known hum...

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Autores principales: Vadstrup, Kasper, Galsgaard, Elisabeth Douglas, Gerwien, Jens, Vester-Andersen, Marianne Kajbæk, Pedersen, Julie Steen, Rasmussen, Julie, Neermark, Søren, Kiszka-Kanowitz, Marianne, Jensen, Teis, Bendtsen, Flemming
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4865152/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27171179
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0155335
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author Vadstrup, Kasper
Galsgaard, Elisabeth Douglas
Gerwien, Jens
Vester-Andersen, Marianne Kajbæk
Pedersen, Julie Steen
Rasmussen, Julie
Neermark, Søren
Kiszka-Kanowitz, Marianne
Jensen, Teis
Bendtsen, Flemming
author_facet Vadstrup, Kasper
Galsgaard, Elisabeth Douglas
Gerwien, Jens
Vester-Andersen, Marianne Kajbæk
Pedersen, Julie Steen
Rasmussen, Julie
Neermark, Søren
Kiszka-Kanowitz, Marianne
Jensen, Teis
Bendtsen, Flemming
author_sort Vadstrup, Kasper
collection PubMed
description Crohn’s disease (CD) is a chronic illness demanding better therapeutics. The marketed biologics only benefit some patients or elicit diminishing effect over time. To complement the known methods in drug development and to obtain patient specific drug responses, we optimized and validated a known human explant method to test drug candidates and pathophysiological conditions in CD intestinal biopsies. Mucosal biopsies from 27 CD patients and 6 healthy individuals were collected to validate an explant assay test where the polarized tissue was cultured on a novel metal mesh disk, slightly immersed in medium imitating an air-liquid interphase. After culture in high oxygen for 24 hours with or without biological treatment in the medium, biopsy integrity and penetration of antibodies was measured by immunohistochemistry (IHC). Nine cytokines were quantified in the conditioned medium as a read-out for degree of inflammation in individual biopsies and used to evaluate treatment efficacy. The biopsies were well-preserved, showing few structural changes. IHC revealed tissue penetration of antibodies demonstrating ability to test therapeutic antibodies. The cytokine release to the medium showed that the assay can distinguish between inflammation states and then validate the known effect of two treatment biologics confirmed by a detection panel of five specific cytokines. Our data also suggest that the assay would be able to indicate which patients are responders to anti-TNF-α therapeutics, and which are non-responders. This study demonstrates this version of an ex vivo culture as a valid and robust assay to assess inflammation in mucosal biopsies and test of the efficacy of novel drug candidates and current treatments on individual patients–potentially for a personalized medicine approach.
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spelling pubmed-48651522016-05-26 Validation and Optimization of an Ex Vivo Assay of Intestinal Mucosal Biopsies in Crohn’s Disease: Reflects Inflammation and Drug Effects Vadstrup, Kasper Galsgaard, Elisabeth Douglas Gerwien, Jens Vester-Andersen, Marianne Kajbæk Pedersen, Julie Steen Rasmussen, Julie Neermark, Søren Kiszka-Kanowitz, Marianne Jensen, Teis Bendtsen, Flemming PLoS One Research Article Crohn’s disease (CD) is a chronic illness demanding better therapeutics. The marketed biologics only benefit some patients or elicit diminishing effect over time. To complement the known methods in drug development and to obtain patient specific drug responses, we optimized and validated a known human explant method to test drug candidates and pathophysiological conditions in CD intestinal biopsies. Mucosal biopsies from 27 CD patients and 6 healthy individuals were collected to validate an explant assay test where the polarized tissue was cultured on a novel metal mesh disk, slightly immersed in medium imitating an air-liquid interphase. After culture in high oxygen for 24 hours with or without biological treatment in the medium, biopsy integrity and penetration of antibodies was measured by immunohistochemistry (IHC). Nine cytokines were quantified in the conditioned medium as a read-out for degree of inflammation in individual biopsies and used to evaluate treatment efficacy. The biopsies were well-preserved, showing few structural changes. IHC revealed tissue penetration of antibodies demonstrating ability to test therapeutic antibodies. The cytokine release to the medium showed that the assay can distinguish between inflammation states and then validate the known effect of two treatment biologics confirmed by a detection panel of five specific cytokines. Our data also suggest that the assay would be able to indicate which patients are responders to anti-TNF-α therapeutics, and which are non-responders. This study demonstrates this version of an ex vivo culture as a valid and robust assay to assess inflammation in mucosal biopsies and test of the efficacy of novel drug candidates and current treatments on individual patients–potentially for a personalized medicine approach. Public Library of Science 2016-05-12 /pmc/articles/PMC4865152/ /pubmed/27171179 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0155335 Text en © 2016 Vadstrup et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Vadstrup, Kasper
Galsgaard, Elisabeth Douglas
Gerwien, Jens
Vester-Andersen, Marianne Kajbæk
Pedersen, Julie Steen
Rasmussen, Julie
Neermark, Søren
Kiszka-Kanowitz, Marianne
Jensen, Teis
Bendtsen, Flemming
Validation and Optimization of an Ex Vivo Assay of Intestinal Mucosal Biopsies in Crohn’s Disease: Reflects Inflammation and Drug Effects
title Validation and Optimization of an Ex Vivo Assay of Intestinal Mucosal Biopsies in Crohn’s Disease: Reflects Inflammation and Drug Effects
title_full Validation and Optimization of an Ex Vivo Assay of Intestinal Mucosal Biopsies in Crohn’s Disease: Reflects Inflammation and Drug Effects
title_fullStr Validation and Optimization of an Ex Vivo Assay of Intestinal Mucosal Biopsies in Crohn’s Disease: Reflects Inflammation and Drug Effects
title_full_unstemmed Validation and Optimization of an Ex Vivo Assay of Intestinal Mucosal Biopsies in Crohn’s Disease: Reflects Inflammation and Drug Effects
title_short Validation and Optimization of an Ex Vivo Assay of Intestinal Mucosal Biopsies in Crohn’s Disease: Reflects Inflammation and Drug Effects
title_sort validation and optimization of an ex vivo assay of intestinal mucosal biopsies in crohn’s disease: reflects inflammation and drug effects
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4865152/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27171179
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0155335
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