Abstract

Small bowel evaluation is warranted in all newly diagnosed cases of Crohn’s disease (CD) as small bowel is involved in two-thirds of CD patients at diagnosis and the involvement can be discontinuous. Endoscopic evaluation of the small bowel in suspected or established CD can be done by video capsule endoscopy (VCE), device assisted enteroscopy (DAE) (which includes single and double balloon enteroscopy, novel motorized spiral enteroscopy (NMSE) and balloon guided endoscopy (BGE)) and intra-operative enteroscopy (IOE). In suspected CD with a negative ileo-colonoscopy, VCE is the preferred initial diagnostic modality in the absence of obstructive symptoms or known stenosis. VCE should be preceded by cross-sectional imaging or patency capsule testing if obstruction is suspected given with high retention risk. In established cases, small bowel cross-sectional imaging (magnetic resonance or computed tomography enterography) is preferred over VCE as it can assess transmural and extra-luminal involvement. VCE is indicated subsequently if necessary to assess disease extent, unexplained symptoms (e.g., anemia, malnutrition) or mucosal healing. Pan-enteric capsule endoscopy (PCE) and the use of artificial intelligence are the recent developments with VCE. DAE with small bowel biopsy can provide definitive evidence of CD including the extent and severity. A final diagnosis of CD is based on the constellation of clinical, radiologic, histologic and endoscopic features. Newer technologies like NMSE and BGE can help with deeper and faster small bowel evaluation. DAE has also allowed endoscopic treatment of small bowel strictures, small bowel bleeding and retrieval of retained capsule or foreign bodies. Endoscopic balloon dilation (EBD), endoscopic electro-incision, strictureplasty and stenting have shown promising results in CD related small bowel strictures. In conclusion, endoscopic evaluation of the small bowel is rapidly evolving field that has a major role in diagnosis and management of small bowel CD and can alter treatment outcomes in properly selected patients.

Highlights

  • Crohn’s disease (CD) is a chronic idiopathic, inflammatory bowel disease that can involve any part of the gastrointestinal tract

  • Small bowel endoscopy is useful for diagnosing small bowel CD with normal ileo-colonoscopy

  • device assisted enteroscopy (DAE) with endoscopic biopsy may help rule out mimics of small bowel CD; histological yield is poor in small bowel CD

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Summary

Introduction

Crohn’s disease (CD) is a chronic idiopathic, inflammatory bowel disease that can involve any part of the gastrointestinal tract. Apart from cross-sectional imaging modalities, gastrointestinal mucosal assessment is necessary. This is traditionally done by ileo-colonoscopy as the terminal ileum is the most common site involved. Direct endoscopic visualization of small bowel mucosa has today shifted the paradigm of diagnosis providing histopathologic evidence to rule out infective and neoplastic causes of small bowel ulcerations. Video Capsule Endoscopy (VCE) enables visualization of the entire small bowel mucosa less invasively than flexible endoscopes. With the advent of VCE and dedicated small bowel cross-sectional imaging (CTE/MRE), the role of small bowel enteroscopy in suspected or established CD is primarily histological confirmation and therapeutic interventions. This review comprehensively sums up the existing, emerging, and ever-expanding literature in this field and highlights areas of future study

Endoscopic Evaluation of Small Bowel Crohn’s Disease
Role of Small Bowel Endoscopy in Suspected and Established CD
VCE in Small Bowel CD
Comparison of VCE with Other Diagnostic Modalities
VCE in Suspected Small Bowel CD
VCE in Established Small Bowel CD
Extent of disease score
Enteroscopy in CD
DAE in Suspected CD
AE in Established CD
DAE Guided Therapeutic Intervention
DAE in Pediatric Patients
Conclusions
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