Abstract

Abstract Background Mucosal healing (MH) is a paramount treatment goal in Crohn’s disease (CD). The vast majority of data pertains to MH in the colon and terminal ileum; nonetheless, proximal small-bowel involvement can be detected in up to 50% of CD patients assessed by capsule endoscopy (CE). Data regarding pan-enteric MH among patients with active CD who were treated with vedolizumab (VDZ) are lacking. We aimed to evaluate the efficacy of VDZ for achieving pan-enteric MH using pan-enteric CE. Methods This was a prospective open-label observational study. Patients with CD who have started on VDZ, were included. Patients underwent small-bowel patency-assessment using patency capsule (PC) and were followed by CE (PillCam Crohn’s, Medtronic, USA) before /within 40 days of treatment onset and after 14 and 52 weeks. In patients with exclusive small-bowel involvement, colonic preparation was not performed and colon was not assessed in subsequent CE. Accordingly, Lewis score (LS) and Pan-enteric Pillcam score (PS) were calculated, when available. The primary outcome was pan-enteric MH defined as LS<135 and LS<135 & PS<4 for CE confined to the SB/SB &colon, respectively. The main secondary outcomes were small-bowel MH (LS<135) and colonic-MH (colonic PS<4). Results 57 patients were recruited, 41 patients were enrolled (median age: 28 [23-45] years, male-44%) and 16 patients were excluded (6- retained PC, 1- technical reason, 2 -did not start VDZ, 7-withdrew consent). Of them, six patients (1- retained PC, 1- multiple strictures, 1- lost to follow-up, 3- clinical flare) and eight patients (4- discontinued VDZ, 2- capsule adverse events, 1- lost to follow-up, 1- clinical flare) were dropped-out before week 14 and week 52, respectively. Pan-enteric MH was observed in 7/39 (18%) patients at week 14, and in 7/30 (23%) patients at week 52 (two patients and 11 patients have not yet reached 14/52-week, respectively). We observed higher rates of both small-bowel MH and colonic-MH during follow-up compared to baseline (Figure 1), and it was consistent with significant improvement at week 14 in both LS (900 [225-900] vs. 450 [0-900], p<0.001) and PS (12 [2-18] vs. 6 [0-14], p=0.001) compared to baseline. Improvement was even more prominent at week 52 (LS- 0 [0-300] PS- 2 [2-6]). No cases of retained capsule were observed during follow-up. Conclusion VDZ induces MH in both the small-bowel and the colon among patients with CD, and this effect may persist up to 52 weeks of treatment.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call