Review article: medical therapy for fistulizing Crohn's disease

2006 ◽  
Vol 24 (9) ◽  
pp. 1283-1293 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. BRESSLER ◽  
B. E. SANDS
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Burton I Korelitz ◽  
Judy Schneider

Abstract We present a bird’s eye view of the prognosis for both ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease as contained in the database of an Inflammatory Bowel Disease gastroenterologist covering the period from 1950 until the present utilizing the variables of medical therapy, surgical intervention, complications and deaths by decades.


Author(s):  
Stephen B. Hanauer ◽  
Themistocles Dassopoulos

2012 ◽  
Vol 153 (14) ◽  
pp. 541-552 ◽  
Author(s):  
Petra Anna Golovics ◽  
Péter László Lakatos ◽  
Gyula Dávid ◽  
Tünde Pandur ◽  
Zsuzsanna Erdélyi ◽  
...  

Medical therapy for Crohn’s disease has changed significantly over the past 20 years with the increasing use of immunosuppressants. In contrast, surgery rates are still high and evidence about the the changes in the outcome of Crohn’s disease over the past decades is scarce. Aims: The objective of this study was to analyze the evolution of the surgical rates and medical therapy in the population-based Veszprém county database. Methods: Data of 506 Crohn’s disease patients were analyzed (age at diagnosis: 31.5 years, SD: 13.8 years). Both hospital and outpatient records were collected and comprehensively reviewed. The study population was divided into three groups based on the year of diagnosis (cohort A: 1977–1989, cohort B: 1990–1998 and cohort C: 1999–2008). Results: Overall azathioprine, systemic steroid, and biological (only available after 1998) exposure was 45.8, 68.6, and 9.5%, respectively. The 1 and 5-year probabilities of azathioprine use were 3.2 and 6.2% in cohort A, 11.4 and 29.9% in cohort B, and 34.8 and 46.2% in cohort C. In multivariate analysis, decade of diagnosis (P<0.001), age at onset (P = 0.008), disease behavior at diagnosis (P<0.001), and need for systemic steroids (P<0.001) were significantly associated with the time to initiation of azathioprine therapy. Early azathioprine use was significantly associated with the time to intestinal surgery in Crohn’s disease patients; in a multivariate Cox analysis (HR: 0.43, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.28–0.65) and after matching on propensity scores for azathioprine use (HR: 0.42,95% CI:0.26–0.67). Conclusions: This population-based inception cohort showed that reduction in surgical rates was independently associated with increased and earlier azathioprine use. Orv. Hetil., 2012, 153, 541–552.


1992 ◽  
Vol 37 (2) ◽  
pp. 54-55 ◽  
Author(s):  
H.E. Ellamushi ◽  
I.S. Smith

Crohn's disease of the small intestine is usually managed by medical therapy with surgery being reserved for obstruction or fistula formation. A patient is described who developed small bowel obstruction due to an adenocarcinoma of the ileum after over twenty years of medical therapy for Crohn's disease, originally diagnosed at a laparotomy for acute abdominal pain. The possibility of malignancy in such long-standing disease should be considered.


Author(s):  
Nicolas Pierre ◽  
Catherine Salée ◽  
Sophie Vieujean ◽  
Emeline Bequet ◽  
Angela‐Maria Merli ◽  
...  

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