A261 INVESTIGATING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN AIR POLLUTION AND BIOMARKERS OF CROHN’S DISEASE IN CANADA
J SHAO, M Xue, A Neustaeter, S Lee, H Leibovitzh, E I Benchimol, W Turpin, K Croitoru

TL;DR
This study explores how air pollution may affect gut health and increase Crohn's disease risk by altering gut inflammation and microbiome composition.
Contribution
The study is the first to link specific air pollutants with gut biomarkers and microbiome changes in individuals at risk for Crohn's disease.
Findings
Short-term air pollution exposure was linked to gut barrier dysfunction and inflammation.
Long-term exposure was associated with changes in gut microbiome taxa linked to Crohn's disease.
Pollutants like PM10 and CO showed significant associations with specific microbial changes.
Abstract
The cause of Crohn's disease (CD) remains unclear. Studies suggest a potential connection between CD and air pollution, with a higher occurrence of CD found in areas with higher pollution levels. Our study sought to explore this potential connection by investigating the relationship between components of air pollution and biomarkers indicative of CD risk. In total, 2,256 healthy first-degree relatives of patients with CD were recruited as part of the CCC-GEM Project. We assessed baseline samples of gut permeability using the urinary fractional excretion ratio of lactulose-to-mannitol (LMR), subclinical inflammation via fecal calprotectin (FCP), and stool microbiome using 16S-rRNA sequencing. Air pollutant (n=8) concentrations were obtained from the National Air Pollution Surveillance Database. We used postal code to estimate air pollutant exposure via inverse distance weighting,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInflammatory Bowel Disease · Microscopic Colitis · Therapeutic Uses of Natural Elements
