Published online Dec 16, 2020. doi: 10.4253/wjge.v12.i12.542
Peer-review started: October 2, 2020
First decision: October 17, 2020
Revised: November 2, 2020
Accepted: November 17, 2020
Article in press: November 17, 2020
Published online: December 16, 2020
Processing time: 72 Days and 1.2 Hours
Crohn’s disease (CD) is a chronic, incurable inflammatory bowel disease located at any point from the mouth through to anus. Mycobacterium avium ssp. paratuberculosis is a suspected causative agent in CD and recent evidence has shown anti-mycobacterial antibiotic therapy (AMAT) to be highly effective in treating this condition. Due to the natural progression of CD, patients will often develop complications such as strictures which are inflammatory, fibrotic or mixed processes causing obstruction, for which endoscopic balloon dilatation, strictureplasty or surgical resection is currently first-line treatment.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Helicobacter pylori and Streptococcus can all cause stenosis and resolution can be achieved by specialized antimicrobial treatment. AMAT has proved to be an effective treatment in CD but its efficacy in opening strictures has not yet been investigated.
This study aimed to investigate the effect and outcomes of AMAT in a cohort of CD patients with an ileal stricture.
A single center, retrospective, medical record case review was conducted on an observational cohort of patients with CD who had an ileal stricture on colonoscopy and were treated with AMAT. The AMAT regimen was prescribed after the initial colonoscopy for a duration of at least six months until follow-up colonoscopy with the attending gastroenterologist. Patient demographics, symptoms, colonoscopy reports, inflammatory serum markers and concurrent medications were recorded at pre-treatment and follow-up between January 1995 and June 2018. The primary outcome was the complete resolution (CR) of CD strictures.
The majority of our cohort (67%) had CR of their ileal strictures in response to AMAT. Improvement was observed through symptomatic clinical response and a reduction in inflammatory serum markers within the cohort. There were minimal side effects attributable to AMAT that were reported in the study.
An unexpectedly high resolution of strictures in CD was observed following treatment with AMAT, reflecting the highest rate of CR reported in the literature. This rate is similar to that seen in tuberculosis strictures (70%), suggesting a shared mycobacterial origin of strictures, and perhaps disease.
The findings of this study should be confirmed by further prospective studies of both ileal and colonic strictures, both with and without concomitant immunotherapy to determine the most successful combination in opening a stricture.