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Stratification and model-based analysis of patients with Irritable Bowel Syndrome using advanced biostatistics and medical data mining techniques

Sammanfattning
ABSTRACT Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is characterized by symptoms that are dominated by abdominal pain and abnormal bowel habits, as defined by the Rome criteria. The complexity of the disorder is exemplified by the heterogeneity of symptom profiles and the number of putative pathophysiological mechanisms. Currently it is unclear whether IBS is a multifactorial disorder or rather a summary diagnosis for several distinct disease entities displaying similar symptoms. This thesis aims to identify subgroups of clinical relevance by developing and demonstrating symptom- and mechanism-based stratification approaches, as well as an integrative analysis pipeline aiming to link different pathophysiological mechanisms. In a clinical sample of IBS patients, as well as in subjects fulfilling IBS in a population-based sample, symptom-based stratification yielded reproducible subgroups, characterized by combinations of gastrointestinal, extra-intestinal somatic and psychological symptoms. In the population-based sample this subgrouping was associated with differences in healthcare utilization. Mechanism-based stratification, focusing on the function of the autonomic nervous system (ANS), demonstrated altered ANS function in IBS patients compared to healthy controls, and identified a subgroup of IBS patients with aberrant overall ANS function, which was associated with more severe diarrhea. This thesis also introduces a stepwise multilevel integrative analysis pipeline using network theory, which presents associations of host-gene expression with mucosa-adherent gut microbiota as well as key IBS symptoms, revealing distinct IBS-specific associations. In conclusion, IBS patients show reproducible subgroups with specific profiles of a comprehensive set of IBS related symptoms and differences in healthcare needs based on these subgroups. Further, multivariate comparisons between IBS patients and healthy controls aid in identifying individuals for which specific complex pathophysiological mechanisms may be of relevance, as demonstrated by identifying a subset of IBS patients with aberrant overall ANS function. This stratification approach could be applied to other pathophysiological mechanisms. Our stepwise multilevel integrative analysis pipeline showed differences in variable associations at the gut mucosal level between IBS patients and healthy controls, and is therefore a model for further, comprehensive analysis of the complex pathophysiology of IBS
Delarbeten
I. Polster A, Van Oudenhove L, Jones M, Öhman L, Törnblom H, Simrén M. Mixture model analysis identifies IBS subgroups characterised by specific profiles of gastrointestinal, extraintestinal somatic and psychological symptoms. Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2017;00:1–11. ::doi::10.1111/apt.14207
 
II. Polster A, Palsson OS, Törnblom H, Öhman L, Sperber AD, Whitehead WE, Simrén M. Population-based IBS subgroups characterized by specific profiles of GI and non-GI symptoms identified through Mixture model analysis report differences in healthcare utilization. Submitted
 
III. Polster A, Friberg P, Gunterberg V, Öhman L, Le Nevé B, Törnblom H, Cvijovic M, Simrén M. Heart rate variability characteristics of patients with irritable bowel syndrome and associations with symptoms. Neurogastroenterol Motil. 2018;e13320. ::doi::10.1111/nmo.13320
 
IV. Polster A, Öhman L, Tap J, Derrien M, Le Nevé B, Sundin J, Törnblom H, Cvijovic M, Simrén M. A network model reveals distinct microbiota-host interactions in irritable bowel syndrome. In manuscript
 
Examinationsnivå
Doctor of Philosophy (Medicine)
Universitet
University of Gothenburg. Sahlgrenska Academy
Institution
Inst of Medicine. Department of Internal Medicine and Clinical Nutrition
Disputation
Som för avläggande av medicinsk doktorsexamen vid Sahlgrenska akademin, Göteborgs universitet kommer att offentligen försvaras i Sahlgrens Aula, Blå stråket 5, 43145 Göteborg den 14.06.18 klockan 9.00
Datum för disputation
2018-06-14
E-post
annikka.polster@gu.se
annikka.polster@gmx.de
URL:
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/55973
Samlingar
  • Doctoral Theses / Doktorsavhandlingar Institutionen för medicin
  • Doctoral Theses from Sahlgrenska Academy
  • Doctoral Theses from University of Gothenburg / Doktorsavhandlingar från Göteborgs universitet
Fil(er)
Thesis cover (2.238Mb)
Abstract (251.2Kb)
Thesis frame (3.627Mb)
Datum
2018-05-24
Författare
Polster, Annikka Virginia
Nyckelord
IBS
Data mining
Biostatistics
Integrative analysis
Subgroup analysis
Host-microbiota interaction
Mixture models
Network medicine
Heart rate variability
Publikationstyp
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-7833-027-0 PDF
978-91-7833-028-7 Print
Språk
eng
Metadata
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