Medications
Treatment is based on the severity of disease, location, and associated complications. Management aims are to resolve the acute presentation and reduce future recurrences. Both UC and CD can be categorized into three categories of severity for management purposes.
- Mild to moderate disease: Patients have little to no weight loss and good functional capacity and are able to maintain adequate oral intake. UC patients have less than four bowel movements daily with no rectal bleeding or anemia, whereas CD patients have little or no abdominal pain. Aminosalicylates (5-ASA) should be used to induce remission in patients with mild to moderate UC (see Table 18-4 - Medications for Inflammatory Bowel Disease).71 Patients with left-sided colitis may respond to topical therapies. Patients who achieve remission with 5-ASAs should continue to take them but may be able to use a lower dose. This class of medications has not been consistently shown to be effective in CD.72 Ileal-release budesonide may be required to induce remission in patients with mild-moderate CD.
- Moderate to severe disease refers to CD patients who fail to respond to treatment for mild to moderate disease or those with significant weight loss, anemia, fever, abdominal pain or tenderness, and intermittent nausea and vomiting without bowel obstruction. In UC, moderate to severe disease manifests with more than six bloody bowel movements daily, fever, mild anemia, and elevated ESR.71 Risk factors for severe CD include age <30 years at initial diagnosis, extensive anatomic involvement, perianal and/or severe rectal disease, deep ulcers, prior surgical resection, and stricturing or penetrating behavior.72 The goal of therapy is to induce remission rapidly with corticosteroids and to maintain remission with immunosuppressive agents and/or biologic agents as appropriate. Treatment is typically continued until the patient fails to respond to a particular agent or the agent is no longer tolerated. Glucocorticoids are often required to induce remission in patients with moderate to severe UC or CD; however, they carry significant side effects and should not be used to maintain remission. Azathioprine, 6-mercaptopurine, or methotrexate can be used to maintain remission but are not effective at inducing remission. Antitumor necrosis factor-α (antiTNF-α) monoclonal antibodies are used to induce and maintain remission. Anti-TNF-α in combination with azathioprine is more effective at inducing remission than anti-TNF-α alone.72 Other biologics are now available for inducing and maintaining remission, including vedolizumab, natalizumab, ustekinumab, and tofacitinib.
- Severe or fulminant disease patients are typically hospitalized because of the severity of their symptoms. Fulminant CD patients have persistent symptoms despite conventional glucocorticoids or antiTNF-α therapy or have high fevers, persistent vomiting, intestinal obstruction, intra-abdominal abscess, peritoneal signs, or cachexia. Fulminant colitis (both CD and UC) can present with profuse bloody bowel movements, significant anemia, and systemic signs of toxicity (fever, sepsis, electrolyte disturbances, dehydration). Toxic megacolon occurs in 1%2% of UC patients, wherein the colon becomes atonic and dilated, with significant systemic toxicity.
- Supportive therapy consists of NPO status with NG suction if there is evidence of small bowel ileus or obstruction. Dehydration and electrolyte disturbances are treated vigorously. Anticholinergic and opioid medications should be discontinued.
- Initial investigation includes cross-sectional imaging to evaluate for intra-abdominal abscess. Blood cultures and stool studies to exclude C. difficile colitis should be performed. Cautious flexible sigmoidoscopy with minimal insufflation and only with CO2 may be done to determine severity of colonic inflammation and for biopsies to exclude CMV colitis.
- Once infection is excluded, intensive medical therapy with IV corticosteroids (methylprednisolone 60 mg/day or hydrocortisone 100 mg three or 4 times per day).
- Patients who fail to improve with 35 days of steroids should be treated with infliximab (510 mg/kg).71 Cyclosporine infusion (24 mg/kg/d, to achieve blood levels of 200400 ng/mL) is used in some centers.
- Early surgical consultation for possible colectomy should be obtained in case medical therapy is unsuccessful.
- Nutritional support is administered as appropriate after 57 days; TPN is often indicated if enteral nutrition is not tolerated.
- Early surgical consultation should be obtained in case medical therapy is unsuccessful. Clinical deterioration/lack of improvement despite 710 days of intensive medical management, evidence of bowel perforation, and peritoneal signs are indications for urgent total colectomy.
- Patients who respond to infliximab should continue it. Patients who respond to cyclosporine should transition to azathioprine or vedolizumab.71