| Literature DB >> 24872716 |
Renée Marchioni Beery1, Sunanda Kane2.
Abstract
Ulcerative colitis (UC) is an idiopathic, inflammatory gastrointestinal disease of the colon. As a chronic condition, UC follows a relapsing and remitting course with medical maintenance during periods of quiescent disease and appropriate escalation of therapy during times of flare. Initial treatment strategies must not only take into account current clinical presentation (with specific regard for extent and severity of disease activity) but must also take into consideration treatment options for the long-term. The following review offers an approach to new-onset UC with a focus on early treatment strategies. An introduction to the disease entity is provided along with an approach to initial diagnosis. Stratification of patients based on clinical parameters, disease extent, and severity of illness is paramount to determining course of therapy. Frequent assessments are required to determine clinical response, and treatment intensification may be warranted if expected improvement goals are not appropriately reached. Mild-to- moderate UC can be managed with aminosalicylates, mesalamine, and topical corticosteroids with oral corticosteroids reserved for unresponsive cases. Moderate-to-severe UC generally requires oral or intravenous corticosteroids in the short-term with consideration of long-term management options such as biologic agents (as initial therapy or in transition from steroids) or thiopurines (as bridging therapy). Patients with severe or fulminant UC who are recalcitrant to medical therapy or who develop disease complications (such as toxic megacolon) should be considered for colectomy. Early surgical referral in severe or refractory UC is crucial, and colectomy may be a life-saving procedure. The authors provide a comprehensive evidence-based approach to current treatment options for new-onset UC with discussion of long-term therapeutic efficacy and safety, patient-centered perspectives including quality of life and medication compliance, and future directions in related inflammatory bowel disease care.Entities:
Keywords: acute management; inflammatory bowel disease; new-onset treatment; ulcerative colitis
Year: 2014 PMID: 24872716 PMCID: PMC4026549 DOI: 10.2147/CEG.S35942
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Exp Gastroenterol ISSN: 1178-7023
Categorization of clinical parameters and disease severity in ulcerative colitis
| Clinical parameters | Disease severity
| |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mild | Moderate | Severe | Fulminant | |
| Stool variables | ||||
| Number per day | <4 | ≥4 | >6 | >10 |
| Stool appearance | ±blood | ±blood | +blood | Continuous rectal bleeding |
| Clinical features | ||||
| Temperature (°C) | Normal | Normal or >37.5 | >37.5 | >37.5 |
| Heart rate | Normal | Normal or tachycardic | Tachycardic | Tachycardic |
| Clinical signs | No signs of toxicity | Minimal signs of toxicity | Increasing signs of toxicity; abdominal pain | Toxic-appearing; abdominal pain/distension |
| Objective data | ||||
| Erythrocyte sedimentation rate (mm/hour) | ≤30 (normal) | Normal or elevated | >30 (elevated) | >30 (elevated) |
| Hemoglobin | Normal | Normal or low | Anemia (<75% of normal value) | Anemia requiring transfusion |
| Radiographic imaging | Colonic air and bowel wall edema with thumbprinting | Colonic dilation | ||
Note: Data from Truelove and Witts.20
Figure 1Sequential therapy in the treatment of ulcerative colitis based on disease severity at presentation (blue boxes, left). Initial treatment options based on disease category are shown (purple boxes). Therapy is escalated based on severity at presentation or failure to respond to prior step. Red arrow signifies time, and maintenance options are shown (yellow boxes). Colectomy (orange box) is considered in fulminant or recalcitrant disease.
5-Aminosalicylate preparations in the treatment of ulcerative colitis
| Generic drug name | Proprietary name | Formulation | Indication | Delivery sites | Acute disease characteristics | Typical dosing (active disease) | Typical dosing (maintenance) | Side effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sulfasalazine | Azulfidine® | 5-ASA linked to sulfapyridine via azo bond | Active UC and remission maintenance | Colon | Distal | 2–4 g orally daily | 2–4 g orally daily | Common (dose-dependent reactions, 10%–40% of patients): sulfapyridine intolerance: nausea, vomiting, anorexia, dyspepsia, abdominal pain, malaise, rash Reversible oligospermia and infertility (males) |
| Mesalamine (rectal) | Rowasa® | Enema suspension | Active distal UC and remission maintenance distal UC | Rectum and colon distal to splenic flexure | Distal | 4 g rectally daily | 1–4 g rectally daily | Anal irritation, abdominal pain |
| Canasa® | Suppository | Active proctitis and remission maintenance distal UC | Rectum | Distal | 1.0–1.5 g rectally daily | 0.5–1.0 g rectally daily | ||
| Mesalamine (oral) | Apriso® | Capsule containing delayed release enteric coated granules | Remission maintenance UC | Terminal ileum, colon | Distal | 1.5 g orally daily | Common 5-ASA reactions (5% of patients, similar to placebo): gastrointestinal disturbances (abdominal pain, nausea, dyspepsia, flatulence), headache, malaise | |
| Asacol® HD | Eudragit-S-coated tablet (release at pH ≥7.0) | Active UC and remission maintenance | Terminal ileum, colon | 1.6–4.8 g orally daily | 0.8–4.8 g orally daily | |||
| Delzicol® | Capsule containing delayed release tablet (release at pH ≥7.0) | Active UC and remission maintenance | Terminal ileum, colon | 2.4 g orally daily | 1.6 g orally daily | |||
| Pentasa® | Ethylcellulose-coated microgranules (time- and pH-dependent release) | Active UC and remission maintenance | Duodenum, jejunum, ileum, colon | 2–4 g orally daily | 1.5–4.0 g orally daily | |||
| Lialda® | Eudragit-S-coated tablets (release at pH ≥7.0); lipophilic and hydrophilic matrices | Active UC and remission maintenance | Terminal ileum, colon | 2.4–4.8 g orally daily | 2.4 g orally daily | Severe, less common 5-ASA reactions: interstitial nephritis, agranulocytosis, pneumonitis, hepatitis, pancreatitis, pericarditis | ||
| Balsalazide | Generic | 5-ASA linked to inert unabsorbed carrier via azo bond | Active UC | Colon | Distal | 2.00–6.75 g orally daily | 2.00–6.75 g orally daily | |
| Giazo® | 5-ASA linked to inert unabsorbed carrier via azo bond | Remission maintenance UC | Colon | Distal | 6.6 g orally daily (for male patients) | Anemia, diarrhea, pharyngolaryngeal pain, urinary tract infection, arthralgia, insomnia, musculoskeletal pain | ||
| Olsalazine | Dipentum® | 5-ASA dimer linked via azo bond | Remission maintenance UC | Colon | Distal | 2–3 g orally daily | 1 g orally daily | Ileal secretory diarrhea |
Notes: Treatments for mild-to-moderate UC. Choice of 5-ASA formulation(s) depends on disease indication and location, patient preference, and compliance, cost, and drug availability.47 Remission rate for rectal 5-ASAs is approximately 62% (versus 30% placebo; P<0.01).42 Similar efficacy and safety profiles are seen among oral formulations that are generally effective in 40%–80% of patients with time to effect of approximately 2–4 weeks.1,47,68 Dose ranges reflect those used in clinical practice and are more broad than doses specifically studied in clinical trials. Combination therapy with oral and rectal 5-ASA is more effective than oral formulation alone for extensive mild-to-moderate UC.42,57,58
Abbreviations: 5-ASA, 5-aminosalicylate; UC, ulcerative colitis.
Immunosuppressant medications in the treatment of ulcerative colitis
| Major category/drug | Indication | Typical dosing | Efficacy | Common side effects | Other |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| General: cushingoid features, flushing, hypernatremia/fluid retention, hypokalemia, metabolic alkalosis, hypertension, diabetes, osteopenia/osteoporosis/avascular necrosis, mood changes/psychosis, sleep disturbances/insomnia, acne, hirsutism, cataracts, glaucoma, myopathy, ecchymosis/petechial bleeding, striae rubrae, adrenal insufficiency without tapering | |||||
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| Mild-to-moderately active distal UC and proctitis. Loss of response to or intolerance of rectal 5-ASA | Topical (rectal): anal leakage, tenesmus, or discomfort with administration | ||||
| Hydrocortisone suppository | 30 mg (one suppository) per rectum twice daily | ||||
| Hydrocortisone enema | 100 mg (one 60 mL unit) per rectum twice daily | ||||
| Hydrocortisone aerosol foam (10%) | 90 mg (one applicator) per rectum twice daily | ||||
| Budesonide (multimatrix) compounded enema | 2 mg/100 mL per rectum daily | ||||
| Prednisone or prednisolone (or equivalent) | Mild-to-moderately active UC or disease refractory to rectal 5-ASAs and/or corticosteroids or oral 5-ASAs at maximal dosage | 40–60 mg orally daily | Induction of response by 14 days with remission in approximately 54%–66% of patients by 4–5 weeks | Corticosteroid effects as above | Maintain typical initial dose for 1–2 weeks until clinical response; then taper dose by 5–10 mg/week. Once at 20 mg dose, taper by 2.5 mg/week |
| Budesonide (multimatrix) | Mild-to-moderately active UC | 9 mg orally daily | Combined clinical and endoscopic remission rate of 17.9% at 8 weeks versus placebo (7.4%; | Corticosteroid effects are minimal. Common side effects: colitis, headache, fever, back pain, insomnia, nausea, abdominal pain | Second-generation corticosteroid with low (10%–15%) bioavailability due to first-pass hepatic metabolism |
| Severe UC or failure of response to oral corticosteroids | Methylprednisolone 40 mg to 1 mg/kg daily (single bolus) or equivalent | 60% of patients hospitalized for severe UC achieve clinical remission in 5–7 days | Corticosteroid effects as above | ||
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| Fever, nausea, allergic reactions, rash, diarrhea, arthralgia, pancreatitis, hepatotoxicity, myelosuppression, immunosuppression, infection, malignancy such as hepatosplenic T-cell lymphoma and non-Hodgkin lymphoma | |||||
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| AZA/6-MP | Maintenance therapy; for persistent moderate or steroid-dependent UC | AZA: 1.5–2.5 mg/kg orally daily | Mean efficacy for AZA/6-MP is 75% for maintenance of remission in UC | Thiopurine-S-methyltransferase enzyme activity or genotype testing suggested prior to administration | |
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| Antibody formation (see below), autoantibody formation, drug-induced lupus, infection (particularly tuberculosis, fungal, viral, and parasitic infections), reactivation of hepatitis B or herpes zoster, psoriasis, opportunistic infections, malignancies (skin cancers, solid tumors, lymphomas such as non-Hodgkin lymphoma and hepatosplenic T-cell lymphoma) | Contraindications: active, uncontrolled infection, active malignancy, untreated latent tuberculosis, moderate-to-severe congestive heart failure, demyelinating conditions and other neurologic disorders such as optic neuritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, lupus-like syndrome, uveitis, thyroiditis, interstitial lung cancer | ||||
| IFX (human–murine chimeric monoclonal immunoglobulin G1 antibody against TNF-α) | Moderate-to-severe UC (outpatient); | Induction dosing: 5 mg/kg intravenously at 0, 2, and 6 weeks | ACT 1: clinical response at 8 weeks in 69% of patients receiving 5 mg/kg IFX versus 37% in placebo ( | Anti-TNF-α effects as above Formation of human anti-chimeric antibodies, delayed-type hypersensitivity reactions, acute transfusion reactions (chest pain, shortness of breath, palpitations, flushing, headache, fever, urticarial rash, hypotension) | |
| Adalimumab (fully humanized monoclonal immunoglobulin G1 antibody against TNF-α) | Moderate-to-severe UC (outpatient); current data does not support use for hospitalized patients with UC | Induction dosing: 160 mg injected subcutaneously at 0 weeks, 80 mg at 2 weeks | Overall rate of clinical remission 16.5% in patients receiving adalimumab versus placebo (9.3%; | Anti-TNF-α effects as above Formation of human anti-human antibodies, local injection site reaction | |
| Golimumab (fully humanized monoclonal immunoglobulin G1 antibody against TNF-α) | Moderate-to-severe UC (outpatient); current data does not support use for hospitalized patients with UC | Induction dosing: 200 mg injected subcutaneously at 0 weeks, 100 mg at 2 weeks | Clinical remission and endoscopic healing at 30 and 54 weeks were 27.8% and 42.4% in patients receiving golimumab compared to placebo (15.6% and 26.6%; | Anti-TNF-α effects as above Formation of human anti-human antibodies, local injection site reaction | |
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| Cyclosporine | Severe/fulminant UC refractory to systemic corticosteroids (inpatient) | Continuous IV infusion: 2–4 mg/kg/day (target whole blood level 200–250 mg/mL) | Clinical response rate 76.9% in steroid-resistant UC | Nephrotoxicity, opportunistic infections, seizures (contraindicated in patients with low cholesterol <100 mg/dL), hypomagnesemia, hyperkalemia, paresthesia, hypertension, hypertrichosis, nausea, vomiting, headache, gingival hyperplasia | Contraindications: infection, hypocholesterolemia (<100 mg/dL), significant renal impairment |
| Tacrolimus | Severe/fulminant UC refractory to systemic corticosteroids (inpatient) | 0.1 mg/kg/day orally targeted to trough level 10–15 ng/mL90 | Clinical remission seen in 72% of patients | Tremor, paresthesia, hyperglycemia, hyperkalemia, hypertension, opportunistic infections | |
Notes:
Dose based on estimated lean body weight and for patients with wild-type thiopurine-S-methyltransferase enzyme activity or genotype. Patients with intermediate enzyme activity or heterozygote genotype should have a 50% dose reduction. In general, those with low enzyme activity or homozygote or compound heterozygote genotype should not receive AZA/6-MP.
Abbreviations: 5-ASA, 5-aminosalicylate; 6-MP, 6-mercaptopurine; ACT 1 and 2, Active Ulcerative Colitis Trials1 and 2, respectively; AZA, aziathioprine; IFX, infliximab; IV, intravenous; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor-α; UC, ulcerative colitis.