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      Enteropathogenic viruses: triggers for exacerbation in IBD? A prospective cohort study using real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction.

      Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
      Adult, Colitis, Ulcerative, diagnosis, etiology, Crohn Disease, DNA, Viral, genetics, Enterovirus, pathogenicity, Enterovirus Infections, complications, virology, Feces, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Prognosis, Prospective Studies, RNA, Viral, Recurrence, Risk Factors

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          Abstract

          While the role of bacteria as an etiological factor triggering relapse in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) has been studied extensively, little is known of the role of enteric viruses. We aimed to prospectively study the prevalence and risk factors for common enteropathogenic viruses in IBD patients in relation to disease activity. IBD patients visiting the outpatient clinic of the Maastricht University Medical Center were included in a prospective cohort with a follow-up of 1 year. Every 3 months and during relapses, fecal samples, demographic, and clinical data were collected and disease activity was scored. A fecal sample from patients at baseline (Crohn's disease [CD] n = 170, ulcerative colitis [UC] n = 116) and an additional sample from a subgroup with changing disease activity during follow-up (CD n = 57, UC n = 31) were analyzed for the presence of rotavirus, norovirus GI and GII, human astrovirus, and adenovirus using quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR). Overall viral pathogen detection, defined by the detection of at least one of the studied viruses, at baseline was 5.2% and differed neither between CD (6.5%) or UC patients (3.4%) (P = 0.20), nor between active disease (4.7%) and remission (5.5%) (P = 0.79). Within the subgroup of patients with changing disease activity no association was found between overall viral pathogen detection and disease activity (P = 0.39). Using multivariate logistic regression, age, gender, disease subtype, disease activity, medication, and season of sampling were not associated with overall viral pathogen detection. Enteropathogenic viruses are not frequently observed in a consecutive cohort of IBD patients and are not a common trigger for active disease in daily clinical practice.

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