Frontiers in Medicine (Apr 2023)

Personalize, participate, predict, and prevent: 4Ps in inflammatory bowel disease

  • Marco Vincenzo Lenti,
  • Marco Vincenzo Lenti,
  • Maria Lia Scribano,
  • Livia Biancone,
  • Rachele Ciccocioppo,
  • Daniela Pugliese,
  • Luca Pastorelli,
  • Luca Pastorelli,
  • Gionata Fiorino,
  • Gionata Fiorino,
  • Edoardo Savarino,
  • Flavio Andrea Caprioli,
  • Sandro Ardizzone,
  • Massimo Claudio Fantini,
  • Massimo Claudio Fantini,
  • Gian Eugenio Tontini,
  • Ambrogio Orlando,
  • Gianluca Matteo Sampietro,
  • Giacomo Carlo Sturniolo,
  • Giovanni Monteleone,
  • Maurizio Vecchi,
  • Anna Kohn,
  • Marco Daperno,
  • Renata D’Incà,
  • Gino Roberto Corazza,
  • Gino Roberto Corazza,
  • Antonio Di Sabatino,
  • Antonio Di Sabatino

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2023.1031998
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

Read online

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), which includes Crohn’s disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC), is a complex, immune-mediated, disorder which leads to several gastrointestinal and systemic manifestations determining a poor quality of life, disability, and other negative health outcomes. Our knowledge of this condition has greatly improved over the last few decades, and a comprehensive management should take into account both biological (i.e., disease-related, patient-related) and non-biological (i.e., socioeconomic, cultural, environmental, behavioral) factors which contribute to the disease phenotype. From this point of view, the so called 4P medicine framework, including personalization, prediction, prevention, and participation could be useful for tailoring ad hoc interventions in IBD patients. In this review, we discuss the cutting-edge issues regarding personalization in special settings (i.e., pregnancy, oncology, infectious diseases), patient participation (i.e., how to communicate, disability, tackling stigma and resilience, quality of care), disease prediction (i.e., faecal markers, response to treatments), and prevention (i.e., dysplasia through endoscopy, infections through vaccinations, and post-surgical recurrence). Finally, we provide an outlook discussing the unmet needs for implementing this conceptual framework in clinical practice.

Keywords