Jack Satsangi
Biography
Jack Satsangi
Jack Satsangi is the Lee Placito Professor of Gastroenterology, University of Oxford; a Governing Body Fellow at Green Templeton College; and an Honorary Consultant Physician in Oxford University Hospital NHS Trust. He qualified in Medicine from St Thomas’s Hospital Medical School, London in 1987; and he completed his postgraduate training in clinical and academic medicine in Oxford as an MRC Fellow and Clinician Scientist, working with Derek Jewell and John Bell. He completed his DPhil in 1996 on the genetics of inflammatory bowel disease.
In 2000, Jack succeeded the late Anne Ferguson as Professor of Gastroenterology in Edinburgh, with the intention of building on her legacy to develop a centre of excellence in inflammatory bowel disease. He returned to Oxford to take up his present post in 2018. He holds an honorary chair in the University of Edinburgh.
Jack has combined care of patients with Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis with basic, clinical and translational research; and post-graduate and undergraduate teaching. His areas of clinical interest have centred on complex and challenging IBD – and have included the management of severe colitis; the management of childhood-onset disease; the safety and efficacy of biological agents, and of novel therapeutic approaches; and the introduction of personalised medicine into clinical practice.
He has been involved in a number of important research advances and publications, including the discovery of cytokine dysregulation in IBD; the definition of the genetic architecture of inflammatory bowel disease; the re-classification by phenotype of inflammatory bowel disease; investigation of gene-environmental interactions; disease epigenetics, and multi-omic analyses in biomarker discovery. He currently is Chief Investigator of the global ICARUS – IBD consortium assessing Covid-19 impact in IBD, led from Oxford and New York; and he leads a number of other initiatives in personalising care, and treatment options. He works with Professors Ellie Barnes and Paul Klenerman on the Oxofrd arm of the OCTAVE and OCTAVE DUO trials.
His current research interests are translational. Laboratory studies are centred on the personalisation of care in inflammatory bowel disease, with a focus on the application of multi-omic technologies in the definition of phenotype, disease progression and drug response. Epigenomic analysis in both children and adults is a key area of interest. Clinical studies focus on the de-escalation of biological therapy; the response to Covid19 and vaccination in patients with inflammatory bowel disease; the development of predictive indices in severe colitis; and the development of non-immunogenic anti-TNF therapy.
Jack has been Secretary of the BSG IBD Committee, and was the first Chair of the BSG IBD Research Committee. He has led National and Regional NIHR Speciality Groups in Gastroenterology; as well as a co-ordinating a series of international research consortia supported by the European Community, and Helmsley Trust. He represents the Royal College of Physicians on the Board of the UK IBD Registry. He has supervised a series of research-active clinicians and students in UK and Europe. He is a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences and of the Royal Society of Edinburgh.
Jack has been a Medical Advisor to the Crohn’s Colitis UK Charity for over 20 years; and has acted as a Trustee or Committee member to CICRA and CORE/GUTS-UK. He has led a series of recent initiatives in increasing Patient and Public understanding of research, in respect to Covid-19 as well as new therapeutic options.
Recent publications
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Identification and validation of a blood- based diagnostic lipidomic signature of pediatric inflammatory bowel disease.
Journal article
Salihovic S. et al, (2024), Nature communications, 15
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Antibody, not Cellular, Immune Responses to SARS-CoV-2 Vaccination Outperform Infection in Inflammatory Bowel Disease Patients.
Journal article
González Cueto E. et al, (2024), Inflammatory bowel diseases, 30, 859 - 862
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Defining predictors of responsiveness to advanced therapies in Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis: protocol for the IBD-RESPONSE and nested CD-metaRESPONSE prospective, multicentre, observational cohort study in precision medicine.
Journal article
Wyatt NJ. et al, (2024), BMJ open, 14
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Safety and efficacy of autologous haematopoietic stem-cell transplantation with low-dose cyclophosphamide mobilisation and reduced intensity conditioning versus standard of care in refractory Crohn's disease (ASTIClite): an open-label, multicentre, randomised controlled trial.
Journal article
Lindsay JO. et al, (2024), The lancet. Gastroenterology & hepatology, 9, 333 - 345
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Sodium fluoride preserves blood metabolite integrity for biomarker discovery in large-scale, multi-site metabolomics investigations
Journal article
Xiong W. et al, (2024), The Analyst, 149, 1238 - 1249
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Dietary Inflammatory Indices Are Not Associated With Inflammatory Bowel Disease Incidence and Progression.
Journal article
Wellens J. et al, (2023), Inflammatory bowel diseases
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SARS-CoV-2-specific immune responses and clinical outcomes after COVID-19 vaccination in patients with immune-suppressive disease
Journal article
Barnes E. et al, (2023), Nature Medicine, 29, 1760 - 1774
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Editorial: in search of environmental risk factors of Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis with mendelian randomisation-authors' reply.
Journal article
Chen J. et al, (2023), Alimentary pharmacology & therapeutics, 57, 1034 - 1035
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Letter: disentangling the role of redox-active compounds in the development of inflammatory bowel diseases-moving towards causal associations. Authors' reply.
Journal article
Chen J. et al, (2023), Alimentary pharmacology & therapeutics, 57, 1048 - 1049
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Defining gene-lifestyle interactions in inflammatory bowel disease: progress towards understanding disease pathogenesis.
Journal article
Zhao J. et al, (2023), Gut