Inpatient Management of Acute Severe Ulcerative Colitis

Author(s):  
David I Fudman ◽  
Lindsey Sattler ◽  
Joseph D Feuerstein

Acute severe ulcerative colitis (ASUC) is a potentially lifethreatening presentation of ulcerative colitis that in nearly all cases requires inpatient management and coordinated care from hospitalists, gastroenterologists, and surgeons. Even with ideal care, a substantial proportion of patients will ultimately require colectomy, but most patients can avoid surgery with intravenous corticosteroid treatment and if needed, appropriate rescue therapy with infliximab or cyclosporine. In-hospital management requires not only therapies to reduce the inflammation at the heart of the disease process, but also to avoid complications of the disease and its treatment. Care for ASUC must be anticipatory, with patient education and evaluation starting at the time of admission in advance of the possible need for urgent medical or surgical rescue therapy. Here we outline a general approach to the treatment of patients hospitalized with ASUC, highlighting the common pitfalls and critical points in management.

2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S073-S074
Author(s):  
K V Patel ◽  
J Segal ◽  
S Sebastian ◽  
S Subramanian ◽  
T Conley ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Acute severe ulcerative colitis (ASUC) traditionally requires inpatient hospital management for intravenous therapies and/or colectomy. Patients with ASUC can deteriorate rapidly and hence require close monitoring of vital signs correlated with clinical, biochemical and radiological investigations. Traditionally, patients are admitted to hospital to facilitate endoscopic assessment, exclude concomitant infective complications, monitor response to first-line corticosteroid treatment and determine the need for and timing of rescue therapy and/or colectomy. Ambulatory care pathways, which utilise outpatient monitoring and drug delivery, have been shown to deliver safe and effective treatment for conditions which have historically mandated hospitalisation e.g. pulmonary embolus. To date there are a paucity of data regarding the use of ambulatory pathways in ASUC cohorts. We used data from PROTECT, a UK multicentre observational COVID-19 i (IBD) study, to report the extent, safety and effectiveness of ASUC ambulatory pathways. Methods Adults (≥ 18 years old) meeting Truelove and Witts criteria between 01/01/2019- 01/06/2019 and 01/03/2020–30/06/2020 were recruited to PROTECT (Figure 1). We utilised demographic, disease phenotype, treatment outcomes and 3-month follow-up data. Primary outcome was rate of rescue therapy and/or colectomy. Secondary outcomes included corticosteroid response, response to rescue therapy, colectomy, mortality and hospital readmission within 3-months. We compared outcomes in 3 cohorts: i) patients treated entirely in inpatient setting; ambulatory patients subdivided into ii) patients hospitalised and subsequently discharged to ambulatory care; iii) patients managed as ambulatory from diagnosis . Results 38%(23/60) participating hospitals used ambulatory pathways. Of 770 eligible patients, 700(91%) patients received entirely inpatient care, 55(7%) patients were discharged to ambulatory pathways and 15(2%) patients were managed as ambulatory from diagnosis. The rate of rescue therapy and/or colectomy (49%[339/696] vs 41%[22/54] vs 67%[10/15], respectively, p=0.18) (figure 2) and secondary outcomes were similar among all three cohorts. After 3-months follow up from the index ASUC diagnosis there was no significant difference in either rate of UC flare, readmission to hospital with UC flare or colectomy between the cohorts. Conclusion In the largest description of ambulatory ASUC care to date, we report an emerging practice which challenges treatment paradigms. Our data suggest ambulatory ASUC treatment may be safe and effective in selected patients but further studies exploring clinical and cost effectiveness as well as patient and physician acceptability are needed.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S357-S357
Author(s):  
P Kakkadasam Ramaswamy ◽  
D Subhaharan ◽  
L Willmann ◽  
J Edwards ◽  
D Shukla ◽  
...  

Abstract Background The efficacy of Infliximab and Cyclosporin A as medical rescue therapy in patients with corticosteroid refractory acute severe ulcerative colitis (ASUC) is well established. We aimed to identify predictors of failure of medical rescue therapy and colectomy during the same admission in this population. Methods Patients hospitalized with ASUC who received infliximab or cyclosporin A after failing intravenous corticosteroid therapy between 1st January 2013 to 31stJuly, 2020 at two Australian tertiary IBD centres were retrospectively analysed. Patients who underwent colectomy during the same admission after medical rescue therapy were defined as non-responders. Logistic regression analysis was performed to identify predictors of colectomy during same admission. Results 226 episodes of ASUC [110 (48.7%) female, median disease duration 2 years] were analysed. 104 (46%) episodes required rescue therapy [94 episodes received medical rescue (16 cyclosporine/78 Infliximab) and 10 underwent direct colectomy]. In patients receiving medical rescue therapy, 16 (17%) underwent colectomy during same admission and 28 (29.8%) underwent colectomy by 12 months. On multivariable analysis, UCEIS score at admission [Coef 0.100 (0.02-0.17), p 0.011] and CRP on Day 3 post-rescue therapy [Coef 0.004 (0.0007-0.007), p 0.018] were significant for predicting colectomy during the same admission. A score with 1 point for each variable (UCEIS score ≥ 7 and CRP value of ≥ 22 mg/L on day 3 post medical rescue therapy) was developed. A score of 2 points had sensitivity 57%, specificity 97%, PPV 80%, NPV 91%, accuracy 89% for predicting colectomy during the same admission and sensitivity 33%, specificity 94%, PPV 80%, NPV 67%, accuracy 69% for predicting colectomy at 12 months. Conclusion UCEIS and CRP on day 3 after rescue therapy are predictors of non-response to medical rescue therapy and need for colectomy during the admission for the ASUC episode. Combination of UCEIS ≥ 7 and CRP ≥ 22mg/L on day 3 post medical rescue therapy has a PPV of 80% for colectomy during same admission and at 12 months. The score can be used to make decisions about colectomy or further medical rescue therapy.


BMJ Open ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. e023765 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Geoffrey Thomas ◽  
Carrie Bayliss ◽  
Simon Bond ◽  
Francis Dowling ◽  
James Galea ◽  
...  

IntroductionAcute severe ulcerative colitis (ASUC) is a severe manifestation of ulcerative colitis (UC) that warrants hospitalisation. Despite significant advances in therapeutic options for UC and in the medical management of steroid-refractory ASUC, the initial treatment paradigm has not changed since 1955 and is based on the use of intravenous corticosteroids. This treatment is successful in approximately 50% of patients but failure of this and subsequent medical therapy still occurs, with colectomy rates of up to 40% reported. The Interleukin 1 (IL-1) blockade in Acute Severe Colitis (IASO) trial aims to investigate whether antagonism of IL-1 signalling using anakinra in addition to intravenous corticosteroid treatment can improve outcomes in patients with ASUC.Methods and analysisIASO is a phase II, multicentre, two-arm (parallel group), randomised (1:1), placebo-controlled, double-blinded trial of short-duration anakinra in ASUC. Its primary outcome will be the incidence of medical (eg, infliximab/ciclosporin) or surgical rescue therapy (colectomy) within 10 days following the commencement of intravenous corticosteroid therapy. Secondary outcomes will include disease activity, time to clinical response, time to rescue therapy, colectomy incidence by day 98 post intravenous corticosteroids and safety. The trial aims to recruit 214 patients across 20 sites in the UK.Ethics and disseminationThe trial has received approval from the Cambridge Central Research Ethics Committee (Ref: 17/EE/0347), the Health Research Authority (Ref: 201505) and Clinical Trials Authorisation from the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency. We plan to present trial findings at scientific conferences and publish in high-impact peer-reviewed journals.Trial registration numberISRCTN43717130; EudraCT 2017-001389-10.


Author(s):  
Konstantina Rosiou ◽  
Christian Philipp Selinger

AbstractAcute severe ulcerative colitis is a medical emergency that warrants in-patient management. This is best served within a multidisciplinary team setting in specialised centres or with expert consultation. Intravenous corticosteroids remain the cornerstone in the management of ASUC and should be initiated promptly, along with general management measures and close monitoring of patients. Unfortunately, one-third of patients will fail to respond to steroids. Response to intravenous corticosteroid therapy needs to be assessed on the third day and rescue therapies, including cyclosporine and infliximab, should be offered to patients not responding. Choice of rescue therapy depends on experience, drug availability and factors associated with each individual patient, such as comorbidities, previous medications or contra-indications to therapy. Patients who have not responded within 7 days to rescue therapy must be considered for surgery. Surgery is a treatment option in ASUC and should not be delayed in cases of failure of medical therapy, because such delays increase surgical morbidity and mortality. This review summarises the current management of acute severe ulcerative colitis and discusses potential future developments.


Author(s):  
Sara Santos ◽  
Verónica Gamelas ◽  
Rita Saraiva ◽  
Guilherme Simões ◽  
Joana Saiote ◽  
...  

Tofacitinib has emerged as a new option for ulcerative colitis. Its rapid absorption, metabolism, and clinical improvement make it an interesting option for rescue therapy in acute severe ulcerative colitis (ASUC), a situation with limited therapeutic options in patients with a long-term disease course and multiple drug failure. The management of ASUC in this setting becomes challenging, underlying the need for new drugs and data on their efficacy and safety. We describe 2 cases of acute episodes in which tofacitinib was used as a rescue therapy.


2020 ◽  
pp. 205064062097740
Author(s):  
Stefano Festa ◽  
Maria L Scribano ◽  
Daniela Pugliese ◽  
Cristina Bezzio ◽  
Mariabeatrice Principi ◽  
...  

Background The long-term course of ulcerative colitis after a severe attack is poorly understood. Second-line rescue therapy with cyclosporine or infliximab is effective for reducing short-term colectomy but the impact in the long-term is controversial. Objective The purpose of this study was to evaluate the long-term course of acute severe ulcerative colitis patients who avoid early colectomy either because of response to steroids or rescue therapy. Methods This was a multicentre retrospective cohort study of adult patients with acute severe ulcerative colitis admitted to Italian inflammatory bowel disease referral centres from 2005–2017. All patients received intravenous steroids, and those who did not respond received either rescue therapy or colectomy. For patients who avoided early colectomy (within three months from the index attack), we recorded the date of colectomy, last follow-up visit or death. The primary end-point was long-term colectomy rate in patients avoiding early colectomy. Results From the included 372 patients with acute severe ulcerative colitis, 337 (90.6%) avoided early colectomy. From those, 60.5% were responsive to steroids and 39.5% to the rescue therapy. Median follow-up was 44 months (interquartile range, 21–85). Colectomy-free survival probability was 93.5%, 81.5% and 79.4% at one, three and five years, respectively. Colectomy risk was higher among rescue therapy users than in steroid-responders (log-rank test, p = 0.02). At multivariate analysis response to steroids was independently associated with a lower risk of long-term colectomy (adjusted odds ratio = 0.5; 95% confidence interval, 0.2–0.8), while previous exposure to anti-tumour necrosis factor alpha agents was associated with an increased risk (adjusted odds ratio = 3.0; 95% confidence interval, 1.5–5.7). Approximately 50% of patients required additional therapy or new hospitalization within five years due to a recurrent flare. Death occurred in three patients (0.9%). Conclusions Patients with acute severe ulcerative colitis avoiding early colectomy are at risk of long-term colectomy, especially if previously exposed to anti-tumour necrosis factor alpha agents or if rescue therapy during the acute attack was required because of steroid refractoriness.


2020 ◽  
Vol 14 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S458-S458
Author(s):  
A Croft ◽  
A Lord ◽  
G Radford-Smith

Abstract Background An episode of acute severe ulcerative colitis (UC) is a watershed event during the disease course with a heightened risk of colectomy during and following these episodes.1 The prompt identification of these events followed by the early implementation of appropriate treatment is essential to obtaining the best clinical outcomes for these unwell patients. The majority of published risk scores predicting the important clinical outcomes of intravenous corticosteroid therapy failure and colectomy-by-discharge rely on clinical data from days 1–3 of therapy.2 There is a paucity of tools that allow for a simple and individualised prediction of risk of corticosteroid therapy failure during the earliest stages of admission. Methods Data were prospectively obtained from 349 presentations of moderate–severe UC requiring hospital admission to a tertiary referral hospital. The failure of intravenous corticosteroid therapy was strictly defined by the (Oxford) Day 3 and Day 7 criteria.3 Seventeen clinical, laboratory and endoscopic variables all available within 24 h of hospital presentation were assessed for their ability to differentiate intravenous corticosteroid therapy responders from non-responders. A stepwise generalised linear model was formulated based on the results of the initial univariate analyses. Results Intravenous corticosteroid therapy failure occurred in 208/349 (60%) of presentations. The formulated risk score included the variables of oral corticosteroid therapy failure, bowel frequency and serum albumin concentration with or without the Mayo endoscopic subscore (MES). With the addition of the MES, the area under the curve (AUC) of the risk score was 0.758. When the positive predictive value of the score (threshold) for correctly predicting intravenous corticosteroid therapy failure was set at 85%, 105/275 (38%) of presentations with available data were identified as high risk for corticosteroid therapy failure (Figure 1). Conclusion This practical risk assessment tool provides clinicians with a personalised prediction of the likelihood of success of a course of intravenous corticosteroid therapy in moderate–severe UC. It enables the identification of individuals at high risk of treatment failure who may be suitable for consideration of early treatment escalation or screening for appropriate clinical trials. References


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