The Saudi Journal of Gastroenterology (Jan 2020)

Clinical features of Epstein–Barr virus in the intestinal mucosa and blood of patients with inflammatory bowel disease

  • Jin-Qiu Zhou,
  • Li Zeng,
  • Qiao Zhang,
  • Xin-Yao Wu,
  • Meng-Lan Zhang,
  • Xing-Tao Jing,
  • Yu-Fang Wang,
  • Hua-Tian Gan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/sjg.SJG_30_20
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 6
pp. 312 – 320

Abstract

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Background: The role of Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) remains to be elucidated. The aim of this study was to investigate the presence of EBV in the blood and intestinal mucosa of patients with IBD and evaluate the association between EBV positivity and IBD. Methods: Patients with IBD, hospitalized between January 2015 and April 2018, were enrolled. The EBV-DNA load in blood samples from each subject was analyzed by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction. EBV-encoded small-RNA 1 (EBER-1) was detected by in-situ hybridization in intestinal mucosa tissue sections of patients with IBD. Result: EBV-DNA was detected in 48 out of 568 patients with IBD (8.4%), and EBER-1 positivity was detected in 27 of these patients (56.3%). Refractory IBD and severe mucosal inflammation were more common in patients with detectable levels of EBER-1 than in those without; the number of EBER-1-positive cells positively correlated with mucosal inflammation (P value < 0.05). Age (≥60 years old) and use of azathioprine were risk factors for EBV infection. There was no significant difference in clinical remission rate and surgical rate between the EBER-1 positive group and EBER-1 negative group, antiviral group and the non-antiviral group, among IBD patients who tested positive for EBV-DNA. Conclusion: Elderly patients with IBD, treated with azathioprine, are more susceptible to EBV positivity. Further, EBV mucosal detection correlated with the severity of mucosal damage and refractoriness, but not prognosis.

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