DNA Damage and Oxidative DNA Damage in Inflammatory Bowel Disease


Autoria(s): Pereira, Cristiana; Coelho, Rosa; Grácio, Daniela; Dias, Cláudia; Silva, Marco; Peixoto, Armando; Lopes, Pedro; Costa, Carla; Teixeira, João Paulo; Macedo, Guilherme; Magro, Fernando
Data(s)

20/10/2016

19/04/2016

01/05/2017

Resumo

Background and aims: Inflammation has long been regarded as a major contributor to cellular oxidative damage and to be involved in the promotion of carcinogenesis. Methods: We aimed to investigate the oxidative damage in inflammatory bowel disease [IBD] patients through a case–control and prospective study involving 344 IBD patients and 294 healthy controls. DNA damage and oxidative DNA damage were measured by comet assay techniques, and oxidative stress by plasmatic lipid peroxidation, protein carbonyls, and total antioxidant capacity. Results: Higher DNA damage [p < 0.001] was found both in Crohn’s disease [CD] (9.7 arbitrary units [AU]; interquartile range [IQR]: 6.2–14.0) and ulcerative colitis [UC] [7.1 AU; IQR: 4.4–11.7], when compared with controls [5.4 AU; IQR: 3.8–6.8], and this was also the case with oxidative DNA damage [p < 0.001] [CD: 3.6 AU; IQR: 1.8–6.8; UC: 4.6 AU; IQR: 2.4–8.1], when compared with controls: 2.3 AU; IQR: 1.2–4.2]. Stratifying patients into groups according to therapy (5-aminosalicylic acid [5-ASA], azathioprine, anti-TNF, and combined therapy [azathioprine and anti-TNF]) revealed significant between-group differences in the level of DNA damage, both in CD and UC, with the combined therapy exhibiting the highest DNA damage levels [11.6 AU; IQR: 9.5–14.3, and 12.4 AU; IQR: 10.6–15.0, respectively]. Among CD patients, disease behaviour [B1 and B2], and age at diagnosis over 40 years [A3] stand as risk factors for DNA damage. For UC patients, the risk factors found for DNA damage were disease activity, treatment, age at diagnosis under 40 years [A1 + A2] and disease locations [E2 and E3]. Conclusions: In IBD there is an increase in DNA damage, and treatment, age at diagnosis and inflammatory burden seem to be risk factors.

This work was supported by a grant from GEDII [Portuguese Study Group for Inflammatory Bowel Disease].

Identificador

J Crohns Colitis. 2016 Apr 19. pii: jjw088

1873-9946

http://hdl.handle.net/10400.18/4064

10.1093/ecco-jcc/jjw088

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Oxford University Press/European Crohn’s and Colitis Organisation (ECCO)

Relação

http://ecco-jcc.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2016/05/13/ecco-jcc.jjw088.long

Direitos

embargoedAccess

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

Palavras-Chave #Inflammatory Bowel Disease #DNA damage #Risk Factors
Tipo

article