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The main aim of the study is to evaluate the lielihood of panenteric mucosal healing in Crohn's disease patients treated with vedolizumab The study will include patients with active Crohn's disease who are starting treatment with vedolizumab. The patients will undergo evaluation with panenteric capsule endoscopy, intestinal ultrasound and inflammatory biomarkers before treatment onset, at week 14 and week 52
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Mucosal healing has been widely accepted as the ultimate therapeutic goal in treatment of IBD patients and is associated with improved short and long-term outcomes in both ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease (CD). However, the vast majority of the available clinical data pertains to colonic mucosal healing. In CD, the small bowel is involved in at least 75% of the patients, frequently in locations that are not accessible to ileocolonoscopy Active small bowel disease can be detected in at least 50% of CD patients in clinical remission[3]. Moreover, colonic and small bowel mucosal healing do not parallel each other, and it is quite common to detect inflammation in one segment while the other demonstrates endoscopically active disease.
Small bowel capsule endoscopy (SBCE) is the prime modality for evaluation of the entire small bowel[5]. It provides a safe and accurate way to screen and evaluate the entire small bowel, using a clinically validated endoscopic score such as the Lewis score (LS). Several studies evaluated the use of SBCE in monitoring mucosal healing in Crohn's disease, in both active and quiescent disease. The safety profile of SBCE in CD is excellent, especially after verification of small bowel patency using a patency capsule (PC).
To date, prospective data pertaining to the efficacy of biologics in induction of small bowel mucosal healing is very limited. The only prospective study to date was relatively small (36 patients) and demonstrated a significant improvement in mucosal inflammation and achievement of mucosal healing in patients that received Adalimumab and were evaluated with SBCE at week 0, 12 and 52 The rate of mucosal healing increased significantly from week 12 to 54.. No such data exists for other biologics. Recently, a combined pan-enteric capsule (PillCam Crohn's capsule) was developed by Medtronic. The capsule is based on an existing PillCam Colon 2 with a modified reading software. This capsule enables evaluation of mucosal inflammation and healing in the entire digestive tract in a single safe and non-invasive procedure. The new software of Rapid 9 includes a new method of describing the inflammatory burden on each of the 3 tertiles of the small bowel and two of the colon as well as the "old" Lewis score. In a feasibility 5 center prospective trial the capsule exited the colon while photographing in 83% of patients and reached the recto-sigma in 95%.
Intestinal ultrasound (IUS) is an accurate, safe and cheap modality for bedside evaluation of the small bowel. It was evaluated for both diagnosis and monitoring of intestinal inflammation in CD, and can be also utilized to assess the response to treatment. Recently, a quantitative score (Limberg index (LI)) for quantification of small bowel inflammation on IUS was validated.
The aim of our study is to assess the utility of the Pillcam Crohn's capsule in assessment of panenteric mucosal healing in CD patients treated with vedolizumab Study interventions
Visit 1 (before vedolizumab is started):
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60 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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