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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT06073288

Unveiling the Microbial Impact on Intestinal Fibrosis

Sponsor: IRCCS San Raffaele

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Crohn's disease (CD), belonging to the class of Inflammatory Bowel Diseases, is a chronic inflammatory disorder that may affect any location of the gastrointestinal tract. It is characterized by transmural inflammation and an overwhelming immune response of the gut mucosa, which leads to severe clinical symptoms. More than 50% of CD patients develop a penetrating or stricturing disease due to fibrostenosis, which most of the time requires surgical intervention since no therapies have been found as effective yet. Among the histological features of stricturing CD, the thickening of the muscularis mucosae and muscularis propria is the main hallmark, primarily due to the excessive proliferation of mesenchymal cells and the increased accumulation of a collagen-rich extracellular matrix in the submucosa, caused by multiple mechanisms, including i) the proliferation of existing local fibroblasts, the induction of both ii) epithelial-to-, and iii) endothelial-to-mesenchymal transition. Even if the alteration of these mucosal functions is mainly caused by the continuous tissue injury occurring during CD-associated chronic inflammation, recent reports suggested that CD associated fibrosis may be driven by inflammation-independent triggers, such as microbiota dysbiosis. Shedding the light on this aspect of CD fibrosis may lead to the development of innovative therapeutic strategies eventually blocking the gut thickening.

Official title: Unveiling the Microbial Impact on Intestinal Fibrosis: New Insights for the Pathogenesis and Treatment of Crohn's Disease-associated Complications

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 70 Years

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

20

Start Date

2023-11-01

Completion Date

2026-11-01

Last Updated

2023-10-10

Healthy Volunteers

No

Conditions

Interventions

OTHER

Surgical specimens of CD and no-IBD patients

Specimens of CD patients and patients without IBD-related disease (ex. diverticulitis) will be collected during the surgery, without other risks for the patients, since we will use only material left after pathologist analysis

Locations (1)

IRCCS Ospedale San Raffaele

Milan, Italy