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Toward transmural healing: Sonographic healing is associated with improved long-term outcomes in patients with Crohn's disease

Authors :
Vaughan, R
Tjandra, D
Patwardhan, A
Mingos, N
Gibson, R
Boussioutas, A
Ardalan, Z
Al-Ani, A
Gibson, PR
Christensen, B
Vaughan, R
Tjandra, D
Patwardhan, A
Mingos, N
Gibson, R
Boussioutas, A
Ardalan, Z
Al-Ani, A
Gibson, PR
Christensen, B
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Transmural healing has emerged as a treatment target in Crohn's disease (CD). We investigated whether transmural healing assessed with intestinal ultrasound (IUS) is associated with improved clinical outcomes in patients with CD in clinical remission. METHODS: Patients with CD in clinical remission at baseline (HBI <4) having IUS between August 2017 and June 2020 with at least 6-months' follow-up were retrospectively studied. Time to medication escalation, corticosteroid use and CD-related hospitalisation or surgery were compared by the presence or absence of sonographic healing, defined as bowel wall thickness ≤3 mm without hyperemia on color Doppler, inflammatory fat, or disrupted bowel wall stratification. Factors associated with survival were analyzed by Kaplan-Meier analysis using Cox proportional-hazard model. RESULTS: Of 202 consecutive patients (50% male), sonographic inflammation was present in 61%. During median follow-up of 19 (IQR 13-27) months, medication escalation occurred in 52%, corticosteroid use in 23%, hospitalisation in 21%, and CD-related surgery in 13%. Sonographic healing was significantly associated with a reduced risk of medication escalation (p = 0.0018), corticosteroid use (p = 0.0247), hospitalisation (p = 0.0102), and surgery (p = 0.083). On multivariable analysis, sonographic healing was significantly associated with an increased odds of medication escalation-free survival (hazard ratio [HR]:1.94; 95% CI 1.23-3.06; p = 0.004) and corticosteroid-free survival (HR:2.41; 95% CI 1.24-4.67; p = 0.009), but not with hospitalisation or surgery. CONCLUSION: In patients with CD in clinical remission, sonographic healing is associated with improved clinical outcomes. Further studies are needed to determine whether sonographic healing should be a treatment target.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1372998917
Document Type :
Electronic Resource