# Longitudinal Evidence of Sustained Taurine Deficiency in Inflammatory Bowel Disease

**Authors:** Rachele Frascatani, Adelaide Mattogno, Silvia Salvatori, Andrea Iannucci, Irene Marafini, Giovanni Monteleone

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/ijms27020725 · 2026-01-11

## TL;DR

This study shows that people with inflammatory bowel disease have consistently low taurine levels over time, regardless of disease activity or type.

## Contribution

The study provides longitudinal evidence of sustained taurine deficiency in IBD patients, independent of disease activity or subtype.

## Key findings

- IBD patients had significantly lower serum taurine levels than healthy controls at baseline and after 45 months.
- Taurine levels in IBD patients remained stable over time, unlike in healthy individuals where they declined with age.
- Taurine deficiency was observed in both active and inactive IBD, especially in younger patients.

## Abstract

Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (IBD), most notably ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn’s disease (CD), are long-standing disorders driven by dysregulated immune responses within the gastrointestinal tract and characterized by several metabolic disturbances, which are believed to influence disease progression. We have recently shown that a systemic deficiency of taurine, a semi-essential amino acid with anti-inflammatory properties, marks IBD. To characterize the temporal dynamics and determinants of taurine deficiency in IBD, we conducted a prospective longitudinal study assessing serum taurine levels in a cohort of 47 patients with IBD compared with 33 healthy controls. Serum taurine concentrations were measured at baseline and after a median follow-up period of 45 months using ELISA. Patients were stratified by disease subtype (UC and CD), age group, and clinical activity status at baseline and follow-up. Serum taurine levels were significantly lower in IBD patients at both baseline and the end of follow-up (p < 0.05), and remained stable over time within the CD and UC cohorts. In healthy individuals, but not in IBD patients, taurine concentrations declined with age, suggesting that age-related metabolic regulation of taurine is altered in the context of chronic intestinal inflammation. Stratification by disease activity revealed that taurine deficiency was present in both active and inactive IBD, particularly among younger patients, and differences between active and inactive disease were minimal. These findings indicate that the persistent reduction in serum taurine in IBD is independent of age, disease subtype, or clinical activity, and remains relatively constant over time across most patient subgroups, suggesting an underlying alteration in taurine metabolism or homeostasis associated with IBD pathophysiology. Further investigation is needed to elucidate the mechanisms linking taurine dysregulation to IBD progression.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** taurine (PubChem CID 1123)
- **Diseases:** Inflammatory Bowel Disease (MONDO:0005265), ulcerative colitis (MONDO:0005101), Crohn’s disease (MONDO:0005011)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** IBD (MESH:D015212), UC (MESH:D003093), CD (MESH:D003424), chronic intestinal inflammation (MESH:D007249), Taurine Deficiency (OMIM:109660)
- **Chemicals:** taurine (MESH:D013654)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12840926/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12840926