4.1 Article

Pouchitis in ulcerative colitis: Correlation between predictors from colectomy specimens and clinico-histological features

Journal

EUROPEAN SURGICAL RESEARCH
Volume 38, Issue 4, Pages 407-413

Publisher

KARGER
DOI: 10.1159/000094669

Keywords

ulcerative colitis; pouchitis; surveillance biopsies

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Pouchitis after restorative proctocolectomy for ulcerative colitis is usually of ill-defined etiology and is encountered with sclerosing cholangitis, bacterial overgrowth, and ischemia. Recently, appendiceal involvement, ileitis, and fissures in the colectomy specimen have been associated with short-and long-term development of pouchitis. To corroborate these recent findings, the histology of 40 colectomies (70% males; mean age 46.3 years, age range 20-70 years; mean follow-up period 3.7 years, range 1-13 years) with yearly follow-up biopsies was correlated with pouchitis and clinical symptoms. Appendicitis, fissures, and ileitis were present in 47, 45 and 5% of the patients, respectively. Pouchitis in patients with appendicitis or with fissures was noted in 44 and 50% at first biopsy and in 70 and 58% during follow-up (p = NS). Of the patients without appendicitis or without fissures, 33 and 33% demonstrated pouchitis at the first biopsy and 30 and 55% during follow-up (p = NS). Clinico-histological correlation revealed normal/near-normal biopsies with the lowest clinical severity score in 77% and with the highest clinical score in 43% (p < 0.025). The histological findings of appendiceal involvement, fissuring ulcers, and ileitis in colectomies for ulcerative colitis do not correlate with the finding of pouchitis in early or late pouch biopsies. A high clinical suspicion score is frequently not correlated with significant inflammation of the pouch. Copyright (c) 2006 S. Karger AG, Basel.

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