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Prognostic role of intestinal ultrasound in Crohn's disease

Journal

WORLD JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY
Volume 29, Issue 23, Pages 3595-3605

Publisher

BAISHIDENG PUBLISHING GROUP INC
DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v29.i23.3595

Keywords

Intestinal ultrasound; Crohn's disease; Postoperative recurrence; Bowel wall thickness; Remission; Intestinal surgery

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The majority of patients with Crohn's disease (CD) develop chronic inflammation and experience relapses that can lead to irreversible damage. Surgery is often required for complicated cases, with a high risk of repeated operations. Intestinal ultrasound (IUS) is a non-invasive and cost-effective method that can assess various aspects of CD, such as bowel characteristics, fistulas, and abscesses. IUS can also predict the response to treatment, disease progression, and the risk of surgery and post-surgical recurrence, making it a valuable tool for IBD physicians.
The majority of patients affected by Crohn's disease (CD) develop a chronic condition with persistent inflammation and relapses that may cause progressive and irreversible damage to the bowel, resulting in stricturing or penetrating complications in around 50% of patients during the natural history of the disease. Surgery is frequently needed to treat complicated disease when pharmacological therapy failes, with a high risk of repeated operations in time. Intestinal ultrasound (IUS), a non-invasive, cost-effective, radiation free and reproducible method for the diagnosis and follow-up of CD, in expert hands, allow a precise assessment of all the disease manifestations: Bowel characteristics, retrodilation, wrapping fat, fistulas and abscesses. Moreover, IUS is able to assess bowel wall thickness, bowel wall stratification (echo-pattern), vascularization and elasticity, as well as mesenteric hypertrophy, lymph-nodes and mesenteric blood flow. Its role in the disease evaluation and behaviour description is well assessed in literature, but less is known about the potential space of IUS as predictor of prognostic factors suggesting response to a medical treatment or postoperative recurrence. The availability of a low cost exam as IUS, able to recognize which patients are more likely to respond to a specific therapy and which patients are at high risk of surgery or complications, could be a very useful instrument in the hands of IBD physician. The aim of this review is to present current evidence about the prognostic role that IUS can show in predicting response to treatment, disease progression, risk of surgery and risk of post-surgical recurrence in CD.

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