Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/119950
Title: ECCO guidelines on therapeutics in ulcerative colitis : medical treatment
Authors: Raine, Tim
Bonovas, Stefanos
Burisch, Johan
Kucharzik, Torsten
Adamina, Michel
Annese, Vito
Bachmann, Oliver
Bettenworth, Dominik
Chaparro, Maria
Czuber-Dochan, Wladyslawa
Eder, Piotr
Ellul, Pierre
Fidalgo, Catarina
Fiorino, Gionata
Gionchetti, Paolo
Gisbert, Javier P.
Gordon, Hannah
Hedin, Charlotte
Holubar, Stefan
Iacucci, Marietta
Karmiris, Konstantinos
Katsanos, Konstantinos
Kopylov, Uri
Lakatos, Peter L.
Lytras, Theodore
Lyutakov, Ivan
Noor, Nurulamin
Pellino, Gianluca
Piovani, Daniele
Savarino, Edoardo
Selvaggi, Francesco
Verstockt, Bram
Spinelli, Antonino
Panis, Yves
Dohertye, Glen
Keywords: Ulcerative colitis
Inflammatory bowel diseases
Therapeutics
Gastroenteritis
Crohn's disease
Issue Date: 2022
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Citation: Raine, T., Bonovas, S., Burisch, J., Kucharzik, T., Adamina, M., Annese, V., ... & Doherty, G. (2022). ECCO guidelines on therapeutics in ulcerative colitis: medical treatment. Journal of Crohn's and Colitis, 16(1), 2-17.
Abstract: Ulcerative colitis [UC] is a chronic inflammatory bowel disease [IBD] characterised by colonic inflammation extending to a variable extent from the rectum. Care of the patient with UC requires appropriate input from across the multiprofessional team. These guidelines summarise the recommended medical treatment for adults with UC. Other ECCO guidelines consider the approach to UC diagnosis and monitoring, nursing care, management of disease complications, risk of infection, and technical aspects of surgery. This document was prepared as part of a process that also led to the publication of a related guideline with recommendations on the surgical care of the patients with UC and on the medical aspects of the management of the patient hospitalised with severe UC. ECCO Guidelines on Therapeutics in Ulcerative Colitis: Surgical Treatment. Patients living with UC can have a variable disease course. In this document, we discuss therapeutic approaches stratified by disease severity [mildly-to-moderately active and moderately-to-severely active disease]. Attempts to define disease severity are widely used in setting clinical trial inclusion criteria and can be measured according to several different definitions. Trial populations will inevitably vary, and we reflect the continuum of disease severity by having the moderate disease category span both broad categories. It is also important to remember that these definitions capture severity at a given point in time and may not reflect the cumulative long-term burden of disease experienced by a patient. It is also important to consider disease extent when planning treatment in UC, as this may affect the optimal route of drug administration. This is typically defined according to disease involving the rectum only [proctitis], disease distal to the splenic flexure [left-sided UC], or disease extending proximal to the splenic flexure [extensive UC]. These definitions of disease extent are recognised as somewhat arbitrary; in clinical practice, topically administered therapies are often used for UC whose extent is limited to the rectum and a portion of the sigmoid colon [proctosigmoiditis], with the term ‘distal colitis’ used to describe this disease distribution. It should be remembered that disease distribution can change and that proximal disease extension can be a negative prognostic marker.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/119950
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