Copyright
©2014 Baishideng Publishing Group Inc.
World J Gastroenterol. Oct 21, 2014; 20(39): 14393-14406
Published online Oct 21, 2014. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v20.i39.14393
Published online Oct 21, 2014. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v20.i39.14393
Table 1 Types of postoperative recurrence and evaluation type
Type of recurrence | Evaluation method |
Clinical | Questionnaire, CDAI, Harvey-Bradshaw Index, IBDQ |
Endoscopic | Rutgeerts score, Crohn’s disease endoscopic index of severity |
Radiographic | CT or MR enterography, barium enema small bowel follow through |
Serological | Measurement of CRP and ESR |
Surgical | Requirement for repeat surgery |
Table 2 Factors in the Crohn’s disease activity score
General well-being |
Number of stools/d |
Abdominal pain |
Weight loss |
Presence of arthralgia, fistuli, fever and/or ocular, dermatological or anal manifestations |
The need for anti-diarrheal medication |
Abdominal mass |
Hematocrit |
Table 3 Factors in the Rutgeerts endoscopic recurrence score for postoperative recurrence of Crohn’s disease in the distal ileum
Endoscopic appearance | Score |
No aphthous ulcers | 0 |
< 5 aphthous ulcers | 1 |
> 5 aphthous ulcers with normal mucosa between the ulcers | 2 |
Diffuse aphthous ulcers throughout the ileum with intervening inflamed mucosa | 3 |
Large ulcers with diffuse inflammation, nodules or narrowing of the ileum | 4 |
Table 4 Overall recurrence rates by post ileocolectomy follow up and type of recurrence
Time post ileocolectomy | Type of recurrence | % of ileocolectomy Patients | Ref. |
1 yr | Clinical | 0%-44% | McLeod et al[61], Walters et al[10], Aratari et al[27], Bordeianou et al[14], Sorrentino et al[28], Pascua et al[53] |
Endoscopic | 0%-84% | Bordeianou et al[14], Walters et al[10], McLeod et al[15,61], Regueiro et al[16,82], Rutgeerts et al[11], Pascua et al[53], Domènech et al[80], Sorrentino et al[28], Meresse et al[40], Lasson et al[89] | |
Surgical | 4%-25% | Aratari et al[27], Iesalnieks et al[57] | |
5 yr | Clinical | 32% | Aratari et al[27] |
Endoscopic | 55%-77% | Bordeianou et al[14], McLeod et al[15], Yamaoto et al[42] | |
Symptomatic | 50% | Bordeianou et al[14] | |
Surgical | 4%-25% | Bordeianou et al[14], Aratari et al[27], Riss et al[56], Yamamoto et al[42] | |
10 yr | Clinical | 52% | Aratari et al[27] |
Endoscopic | 74% | Malireddy et al[17], Bordeianou et al[14] | |
Surgical | 12%-57% | Stocchi et al[18], Aratari et al[27], Riss et al[56], Iesalnieks et al[57] |
Table 5 Effect of smoking on postoperative recurrence
Association | Number and type of patients | Ref. |
Recurrent clinical symptoms (OR = 2.96) | 59 patients post colonic resection for CD (not only ileocolectomies) | Kane et al[22] |
Shorter duration to clinical relapse (104 wk shorter) | ||
Recurrent clinical symptoms (worse CDAI scores) | 182 post colonic resection for CD (not only ileocolectomies) | Cottone et al[23] |
Increased rates of endoscopic recurrence | ||
Increased likelihood of requiring surgery | ||
Smoking at the time of the 1st ileocolectomy conferred a 2.1 fold increased likelihood of requiring another operation | 176 post ileocolectomy patients with at least 1 recurrence | Unkart et al[21] |
OR of 2.2 for clinical recurrence | Meta-analysis of 16 studies, 2962 patients | Reese et al[24] |
Increased risk of surgical recurrence particularly at 10 years (OR = 2.6) | ||
Smokers had a lower 5 and 10-yr recurrence free likelihood (65 and 45% vs 81 and 64% in nonsmokers) | 141 ileocolectomy patients | Yamamoto and Keighley[26] |
Recurrence free rates were lower in those that smoked > 15 cigarettes per day | ||
Patients that quit smoking are less likely to require redo ileocolectomy | 266 | Ryan et al[25] |
No association with recurrence | 89 lap ileocolectomy patients | Malireddy et al[17] |
No association with clinical or surgical recurrence | 83 | Aratari[27] |
No association with clinical or endoscopic recurrence | 43 resections (30 = Ileocolectomies) | Sorrentino[28] |
Table 6 Key studies on medical treatment for the prevention of postoperative recurrence in post ileocolectomy patients
Interventions Compared | Study Design | Study Numbers (end of follow-up) | Follow-up | Clinical Improvement | Endoscopic Improvement | Other | Ref. |
Mesalamine vs Placebo | Double Blind, Multicenter | 87 | 12 mo | 59% of placebo vs 41% of mesalamine had a clinical relapse | Significantly less severe and less frequent lesions in mesalamine group (P < 0.008) | Severe endoscopic or radiologic was 24% in mesalamine vs 56% of placebo (P = 0.004) | Brignola et al[68] |
Budesonide vs placebo | Double-blind, randomized trial | 129 | 12 mo | No difference in CDAI at any time point in the study | Only patients who underwent surgery for increased disease symptoms (not fibrostenotic or fistulizing disease) had a significantly lower endoscopic recurrence rate (32% vs 65% of the placebo group) | AT 12 mo the ESR value was 13.3 mm/h in the budesonide group vs 20.2 mm/h in the placebo group (P = 0.017). Mean CRP values after decreased from 19.0 to 6.2 mg/L in the budesonide group and from 12.7 to 12.2 mg/L in the placebo group (P = 0.018) | Hellers et al[64] |
Mesalamine vs placebo | Double-blind, placebo controlled12 | 246 | 48 wk | 25% of the mesalamine vs 36% of the placebo had a relapse [(per CDAI) P = 0.06] On subgroup analysis ileocolonic patients had fewer relapses on mesalamine (21% vs 41%) P = 0.003 | 10% vs 23% surgical recurrence (P = 0.13) | Sutherland et al[67] | |
Mesalamine vs placebo | Randomized | 163 post-surgical patients1 109 were post ileocolectomy | Maximum 72 mo | Endoscopic and radiological recurrence was significantly decreased in the mesalamine group with relative risks of 0.6 (P = 0.016) | 31% symptomatic recurrence rate (symptoms plus endoscopic and/or radiological confirmation of disease) vs 41% in the control group, P = 0.03 | McLeod et al[69] | |
6 MP, mesalamine or placebo | Multi (5) center, double blind, randomized | 131 | 24 mo | Clinical recurrence was improved by mesalamine or 6 MP. Clinical recurrence rates at 24 mo were 50% for 6 MP, 58% for mesalamine and 77% for placebo (P = 0.04) | Only 6 MP, not mesalamine was superior to placebo to prevent endoscopic and radiographic recurrence at 24 mo. Relapse was 43% with 6 MP, 63% with mesalamine, 64% with placebo (P = 0.03) | Radiographic recurrence rates were 33% for 6 MP, 46% for mesalamine and 49% for placebo (P > 0.05) | Hanauer et al[76] |
Infliximab vs mesalamine (control) | Prospective, multicenter pilot study to determine if giving infliximab after diagnosis of postoperative endoscopic ileocolic CD recurrence at 6 mo can induce endoscopic remission at 54 wk | 24 (19 had ileocaecal disease) | 54 wk | No clinical recurrence in the infliximab group at 6 mo | No endoscopic remission at 54 wk in the mesalamine group vs the infliximab group 54% had endoscopic remission at 54 wk (P = 0.01) | Sorrentino et al[28] | |
18% of mesalamine who had clinical relapse by 9 mo | |||||||
Adalizumab vs AZA vs mesalamine | Randomized | 51 | 2 yr | The ADA treated patients had the lowest incidence of endoscopic recurrence (6.3% vs 64.7% of the AZA group and 83.3% of the mesalamine group) | Savarino et al[83] | ||
Infliximab vs placebo | Randomized | 24 | 1 yr | Clinical remission was higher in the IFX group (80% vs 54%) but P = 0.38) | Endoscopic and histologic recurrence was significantly lower at 1 yr in the patients treated with infliximab (1 of 11; 9.1% and) vs placebo (11 of 13 patients; 84.6%). P = 0.0006 | Lower histologic recurrence in the IFX group (3 of 11/27% vs 11 of 13/85% of placebo) P = 0.01 | Regueiro et al[82] |
Metronidazole +AZA or placebo | 62 | Randomized | 12 mo | Endoscopic recurrence was observed in 14 of 32 (43.7%) patients in the AZA group and in 20 of 29 (69.0%) patients in the placebo group at 12 mo post-surgery (P = 0.048. At 1 yr 21% of the AZA group were lesion free vs 3% of the placebo (P = 0.04) | D'Haens et al[77] | ||
Metronidazole vs placebo | Double-blind controlled | 51 | 3 yr | Clinical recurrence rates at 1 yr were 4% in the metronidazole vs 25% of placebo) NSD P = 0.04. Reductions at 2 yr (26% vs 43%) and 3 yr (30% vs 50%) both NSD | At 12 wk, 21 of 28 patients (75%) in the placebo group had recurrent lesions in the neoterminal ileum vs 12 of 23 patients (52%) in the metronidazole group (P = 0.09) | Rutgeerts et al[65] | |
Immunosuppressants (AZA/6 MP or MTX) vs control (5 ASAs or no treatment) | 26 patients undergoing their 2nd ileocolectomy | 3 yr | Clinical recurrence was lower in the immmunosuppressant group vs the control group (3/12, 25% vs 6/10, 60%; P < 0.05) | The control group required a 3rd resection more commonly. (7/12, 58% vs 2/14, 17% P < 0.02) | Alves et al[79] | ||
(range 17-178 mo) | No difference in time to recurrence was seen (approximately 27 mo in both groups) | ||||||
AZA therapy commenced immediatiely post resection | Prospective, observational | 56 consecutive patients 15 or 27% had ileocolectomies | Mean 12-84 mo | No clinical recurrence at 12 mo recurrence | 70% had endoscopic recurrence at 12 mo. The cumulative probability of endoscopic recurrence was 82% at 5 yr | Domènech[90] |
- Citation: Connelly TM, Messaris E. Predictors of recurrence of Crohn’s disease after ileocolectomy: A review. World J Gastroenterol 2014; 20(39): 14393-14406
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1007-9327/full/v20/i39/14393.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.3748/wjg.v20.i39.14393