4.8 Article

Evolving Short- and Long-Term Goals of Management of Inflammatory Bowel Diseases: Getting It Right, Making It Last

Journal

GASTROENTEROLOGY
Volume 162, Issue 5, Pages 1424-1438

Publisher

W B SAUNDERS CO-ELSEVIER INC
DOI: 10.1053/j.gastro.2021.09.076

Keywords

Therapeutic Goals; Disease Control; Disease Modification; Natural History.

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Short- and long-term treatment targets in inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs) have shifted from symptom control to endoscopic healing and patient-centered parameters. The impact of early treatment on IBD remains unclear, highlighting the need for prospective disease-modification trials. The SPIRIT consensus has defined the targets for these trials to evaluate the long-term effects of early treatment on quality of life, disability, complications, neoplastic lesions, and mortality.
Short-and long-term treatment targets in inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs) evolved during the last decade, shifting from symptom control to endoscopic healing and patient-centered parameters. The STRIDE-II consensus placed these targets on a timeline from initiating treatment and introduced additional targets, normalization of serum and fecal biomarkers, restoration of quality of life, prevention of disability, and, in children, restoration of growth. Transmural healing in Crohn's disease and histologic healing in ulcerative colitis currently serve as adjunct measures to gauge remission depth. However, whether early treatment according to a treat-to-target paradigm affects the natural course of IBD remains unclear, leading to the need for prospective disease-modification trials. The SPIRIT consensus defined the targets for these trials to assess the long-term impact of early treatment on quality of life, disability, disease complications, risk of neoplastic lesions, and mortality. As further data emerge about the risk-benefit balance of aiming toward deeper healing, the targets in treating IBDs may continue to shift.

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