| Literature DB >> 31970158 |
Abstract
There is currently no cure for inflammatory bowel disease. Most recent treatments and treatment strategies allow for healing intestinal lesions and maintaining steroid-free remission in a subset of patients. These patients and their doctors often ask themselves whether the treatment could be withdrawn. Several studies in both Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis have demonstrated a risk of relapse, which varies between 20 and 50% at 1 year and between 50 and 80% beyond 5 years. These numbers clearly highlight that stopping therapy should not be a systematically proposed strategy in those remitting patients. Nevertheless, they also indicate that a minority of patients may not relapse over mid-term and that those who have relapsed may have benefited from a drug-free period before being treated again for a new cycle of treatment. In this context, it would be good to optimally select patients who can be candidates for a successful treatment withdrawal. The criteria impacting this decision are as follows: the risk of relapse (linked to factors like mucosal healing and biomarkers), the consequence of a potential relapse, the tolerance and potential side effects of therapy, patients' priorities and preferences, and the costs. Integration of these parameters allows for the proposal of a decisional algorithm that may help the patients and doctors to make an appropriate decision for their individual case.Entities:
Keywords: Crohn's disease; prediction; relapse; treatment withdrawal; ulcerative colitis
Year: 2020 PMID: 31970158 PMCID: PMC6960136 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2019.00302
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Most important factors favoring treatment withdrawal in IBD.
| Mucosal healing (mainly CD and anti-TNF) |
| Normal CRP (mainly CD) |
| Low fecal calprotectin (<250 μg/g) (mainly CD and anti-TNF) |
| Low or undetectable trough levels of biologic treatment (mainly CD and anti-TNF) |
| Immunomodulator co-treatment (mainly CD and anti-TNF) |
| No complex perianal disease |
| No severe rectal disease |
| No intestinal or colonic stricture |
| No history of intra-abdominal abscess or fistula |
| Limited extent of the disease in the past |
| Older age (>65 years old) |
| Co-morbidities favoring infection or the risk of cancer |
| Side effects attributed to the treatment |
| Pregnancy |
| High fear of treatment side effects |
| Low fear of surgery |
| Acceptance of relapse risk |
| Expensive medication |
| No/insufficient reimbursement |
For the factors associated with a lower risk of relapse, the situations for which evidence is the strongest are put under brackets.
IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; CD, Crohn's disease; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; CRP, C-reactive protein.
Figure 1Proposed algorithm for treatment withdrawal decision in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). This algorithm may provide a hierarchy among the questions and factors that have to be assessed when contemplating treatment withdrawal in IBD. Some factors like the cost and the reimbursement may be specific to some health care systems and jurisdiction.