Twin cohort for the study of (pre)clinical Inflammatory Bowel Disease in the Netherlands: The TWIN-study

Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (IBD), i.e. Crohn’s Disease (CD) and Ulcerative Colitis (UC), are thought to arise in genetically susceptible individuals in the context of environmental triggers, with a potential dominant role for the interplay between the gut microbiota, and the mucosal immune system. However, the relative importance and the exact role of these factors in the pathogenesis of IBD is presently unknown. Interpretation of published research in this field is often hampered by reverse causation, and data generated in animal models cannot be directly extrapolated to the human condition. The disease is probably triggered years before the occurrence of symptoms, but currently patients are only identified when clinical disease is established. The preclinical phase of IBD might hold the key to understanding the pathogenesis of IBD and could provide a huge window of opportunity of halting or even preventing disease development. At this time, data on this phase of the disease are limited. Identifying and validating biomarkers and pathophysiological mechanisms is one of the necessary steps toward prediction, prevention and optimalization of therapy in IBD care. Unaffected twin-siblings of IBD affected individuals are at increased risk of developing IBD. Therefore, studying IBD-discordant, IBD-concordant and non-IBD-concordant twins or multiples gives the unique opportunity to 1) define mechanisms that underlie (the early development of) IBD and 2) identify and validate markers of (pre)clinical IBD.

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Titel Twin cohort for the study of (pre)clinical Inflammatory Bowel Disease in the Netherlands: The TWIN-study
Omschrijving

Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (IBD), i.e. Crohn’s Disease (CD) and Ulcerative Colitis (UC), are thought to arise in genetically susceptible individuals in the context of environmental triggers, with a potential dominant role for the interplay between the gut microbiota, and the mucosal immune system. However, the relative importance and the exact role of these factors in the pathogenesis of IBD is presently unknown. Interpretation of published research in this field is often hampered by reverse causation, and data generated in animal models cannot be directly extrapolated to the human condition. The disease is probably triggered years before the occurrence of symptoms, but currently patients are only identified when clinical disease is established. The preclinical phase of IBD might hold the key to understanding the pathogenesis of IBD and could provide a huge window of opportunity of halting or even preventing disease development. At this time, data on this phase of the disease are limited. Identifying and validating biomarkers and pathophysiological mechanisms is one of the necessary steps toward prediction, prevention and optimalization of therapy in IBD care. Unaffected twin-siblings of IBD affected individuals are at increased risk of developing IBD. Therefore, studying IBD-discordant, IBD-concordant and non-IBD-concordant twins or multiples gives the unique opportunity to 1) define mechanisms that underlie (the early development of) IBD and 2) identify and validate markers of (pre)clinical IBD.

Keywords
Contact points
Contact point 1
URI
http://catalogue.hdsu.nl/catalogue-rdf/api/rdf/Contacts/firstName=Sarah%20Luna&lastName=Dijkstra&resource=The%20TWIN-study
Naam
Sarah Luna Dijkstra
Name (translations)
Email
s.l.dijkstra-6@umcutrecht.nl
Identifier
URL
    Publisher
    Publisher 1
    URI
    http://catalogue.hdsu.nl/catalogue-rdf/api/rdf/Agents/id=UMC%20Utrecht&resource=The%20TWIN-study
    Naam
    University Medical Center Utrecht
    Name (translations)
    Email
    info@umcu.nl
    URL
    https://www.umcutrecht.nl
    Type
    Publisher note
    Publisher type
    Identifier
    https://ror.org/0575yy874
    Creator
    Creator 1
    URI
    http://catalogue.hdsu.nl/catalogue-rdf/api/rdf/Agents/id=UMC%20Utrecht&resource=The%20TWIN-study
    Naam
    University Medical Center Utrecht
    Name (translations)
    Email
    info@umcu.nl
    URL
    https://www.umcutrecht.nl
    Type
    Publisher note
    Publisher type
    Identifier
    https://ror.org/0575yy874
    Landing page https://www.umcutrecht.nl/nl/wetenschappelijk-onderzoek/de-twin-studie-onderzoek-met-tweelingen-naar-chronische-ontstekingsziekten-van-de-darm-ibd
    Release date
    Modification date
    In Series
      Versie
      Version notes
      Identifier https://doi.org/10.71739/1fg4-jf23
      Frequency
      Provenance

      Observational study with both a cross-sectional and longitudinal design

      Type
      Temporal coverage
      Temporal resolution
      Spatial coverage
      Spatial coverage 1
      URI
      http://publications.europa.eu/resource/authority/country/BEL
      Label
      Geometry
      Bounding Box
      Centroid
      Spatial resolution in meters
      Access rights http://publications.europa.eu/resource/authority/access-right/NON_PUBLIC
      Other identifier
      Theme
      1. http://publications.europa.eu/resource/authority/data-theme/HEAL
      Taal
      Documentation
      Conforms to
      Is referenced by
      Distribution
      Sample
      Analytics
      Applicable legislation
      1. http://data.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/868/oj
      Has version
      Code values
      Coding system
      Purpose
      Health category
      Health theme
      Legal basis
      Minimum typical age
      Maximum typical age
      Number of records
      Number of records for unique individuals. 138
      Personal data
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      Trusted Data Holder
      Population coverage
      Retention period
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      URI http://catalogue.hdsu.nl/catalogue-rdf/api/rdf/Resources/id=The%20TWIN-study