Review explores chronic enterocolitis in rhesus macaques as potential model for post-infectious IBS
This systematic review examined the literature on chronic enterocolitis (CE) in colony-housed rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) and its potential as a naturally occurring model for post-infectious irritable bowel syndrome (PI-IBS) in humans. The review did not report specific intervention, comparator, primary outcome, or sample size details, focusing instead on synthesizing existing observations about the syndrome.
The main finding was that CE leads to chronic diarrhea and severe weight loss severe enough to necessitate euthanasia in up to 25% of affected adult macaques. The review notes there is some evidence the syndrome occurs as a post-infectious sequela, particularly following Campylobacter spp. infections, with associations to protozoal agents and other bacteria also investigated. In humans, PI-IBS develops in over one-third of people after an episode of infectious gastroenteritis.
Key limitations include that an underlying cause for CE has yet to be determined, and mitigating strategies have shown variable success. The review explicitly states causality for CE as a post-infectious model is not proven, and existing animal models fail to replicate PI-IBS in its entirety. Safety and tolerability data were not reported. The practice relevance for clinicians is currently indirect, as this work explores a potential preclinical model; its utility hinges on future research proving causality and validating the model's translational relevance to human PI-IBS pathophysiology.