Published online Dec 21, 2021. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v27.i47.8047
Peer-review started: March 22, 2021
First decision: June 14, 2021
Revised: July 12, 2021
Accepted: December 8, 2021
Article in press: December 8, 2021
Published online: December 21, 2021
Processing time: 269 Days and 17.3 Hours
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a chronic condition that requires continuous medical treatment. To date, the medical management of patients with moderately-to-severely active IBD who develop dependence or resistance to corticosteroids is based on immunomodulator drugs. Such therapies are licenced after passing through three phases of randomized controlled trials (RCTs), and are subsequently adopted in clinical practice. However, the real-life population of IBD patients who require these therapies can significantly differ from those included in RCTs. As a matter of fact, there is a number of exclusion criteria – nearly ubiquitous in all RCTs – that prevent the enrolment of specific patients: Chronic refractory pouchitis or isolated proctitis in ulcerative colitis, short-bowel syndrome and stomas in Crohn’s disease, ileorectal anastomosis in both ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease, and elderly age are some representative examples. In this frontier article, we aim to give an overview of current literature on this topic, in order to address the main knowledge gaps that need to be filled in the upcoming years.
Core Tip: Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients with chronic refractory pouchitis, refractory ulcerative proctitis (including those with ileorectal anastomosis), stomas, or short-bowel are routinely excluded from clinical trials, and there is a consequent lack of quality data with regard to their management; however, these patients represent a part of IBD real-life population that needs to be acknowledged. In the present article, our aim is therefore to outline the evidence available so far, and to highlight the main knowledge gaps still present.