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The purpose of this study is to determine whether ultrasound-based assessment of intestinal stiffness in patients with Crohn's disease predicts the effectiveness of medical therapy or the need for surgical resection.
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Modern medical therapy in Crohn's disease, including immunomodulators and biologic compounds, has revolutionized disease treatment. However, a significant portion of individuals will not respond to medications, most often due to the development of intestinal fibrosis. Over the course of Crohn's disease repeated episodes of inflammation and abnormal wound healing lead to progressive intestinal fibrosis, strictures, and bowel obstruction. While inflammatory Crohn's disease often responds to medical therapy, predominantly fibrostenotic intestinal disease is unresponsive and requires surgery. Our inability to accurately distinguish intestinal inflammation from fibrosis frequently leads to empiric trials of steroids and immunosuppressive therapies. This often proves futile, delays inevitable surgery, and unnecessarily exposes the patient to medication-related risks for months and sometimes years. At present there are no available means to distinguish medically responsive inflammatory disease from predominately fibrotic intestinal disease. The unmet need in this field is an accurate diagnostic technology to determine which patients will benefit from anti-inflammatory therapy, and which patients should go directly to surgery. Non-invasive ultrasound stiffness imaging (USI) may be a surrogate marker of underlying bowel wall fibrosis that aids in predicting if Crohn's disease will be responsive to medical therapy.
Two USI methods have recently been developed: Ultrasound elasticity imaging (UEI) uses 2D speckle-tracking to measure tissue strain, a surrogate of fibrosis. The second, shear wave imaging (SWI), is a commercially available technology that measures the speed of ultrasonic shear waves through tissue. Shear waves travel more rapidly through stiff tissue. The central hypothesis of this proposal is that ultrasound stiffness imaging (USI) quantitatively distinguishes predominately inflammatory from fibrotic bowel wall thickening, and therefore is predictive of the likelihood of response to medical therapy or the need for surgery.
We plan to objectively test our central hypothesis and attain the objective of this application by pursuing the following three specific aims:
Specific Aim 1 (SA-1): Determine if USI stiffness measurements of intestinal strictures in Crohn's patients admitted with small bowel obstruction predicts response or failure of medical therapy based on CDAI and objective inflammatory biomarkers during index hospitalization and at 90 day follow-up.
Inpatient Inclusion Criteria:
Inpatient Exclusion Criteria:
Specific Aim 2 (SA-2): Determine if USI stiffness measurements of diseased ileum in Crohn's outpatients starting Anti-Tumor Necrosis Factor-Alpha therapy predicts response to medical therapy based on CDAI and objective inflammatory biomarkers.
Outpatient Inclusion Criteria
Outpatient Exclusion Criteria:
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30 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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