Treatment of Crohn's disease with colony-stimulating factors: An overview

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Abstract

Current treatments for Crohn's disease are aimed at suppressing excessive immune activation in the bowel walls. However, alternative strategies can be drawn. These involve the augmentation of the innate immune response, in the hypothesis that patients affected with Crohn's disease are characterized by a relative immunodeficiency, with failure of the defensive barrier to luminal microbes and microbial products, resulting in a chronic inflammatory process sustained by T-cells. Alternatively, therapy could act by enhancing the number or the activity of subpopulations of T regulatory cells, able to reduce T-cell activation. Colony-stimulating factors are substances that could be efficacious in these settings. In fact, besides in vitro and animal studies, some human studies have been conducted in recent years with both granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor, the results of which are reported here. © 2008 Guidi et al, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd.

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Guidi, L., Mocci, G., Marzo, M., & Rutella, S. (2008). Treatment of Crohn’s disease with colony-stimulating factors: An overview. Therapeutics and Clinical Risk Management. https://doi.org/10.2147/tcrm.s2756

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