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Home » Conference Reports » AIBD 2012

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Inflammatory Bowel Disease and Ulcerative Colitis: A Difficult Differential

By Jeffrey Hertzberg, MD, MS | December 17, 2012

The classic differential diagnosis of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), a review of the clinical presentation, the endoscopic appearance, and the pathology were the topics of a presentation at 2012 Advances in Inflammatory Bowel Diseases, the Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation’s Clinical & Research Conference, in Hollywood, Florida.

Mark Osterman, MD, MSCE, from the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, provided a straightforward discussion that drove attendees toward the more current understanding of the clinical and genetic overlap between the 2 major forms of IBD and the need for further research to better distinguish them.

Dr Osterman noted that ulcerative colitis is classically described as having the following characteristics:

• Involvement of the colon only, beginning in the rectum and extending proximally in a continuous fashion.

• Typical ulcerative colitis pathology: Inflammation is confined to the mucosa and submucosa, with cryptitis and/or crypt abscesses, and crypt architectural distortion.

In contrast, Crohn disease is classically described as having the following characteristics:

• Inflammation in discontinuous segments of the GI tract, from the mouth to the anus, sparing the rectum (“skip” lesions).

• Aphthous ulcers.

• Perianal involvement, with skin tags, fissures, and fistulae.

• Transmural inflammation, causing anatomic complications, including stricture, perforation, fistulae, and abscesses.

• Typical Crohn disease pathology: noncaseating granulomas, chronic inflammatory infiltrate, and crypt architecture distortion.

Dr Osterman touched on the diagnosis of the comparatively benign and often self-limited syndrome of microscopic colitis, where colonoscopy is normal but microscopic examination shows epithelial injury, with flattening and mucin depletion and increased intraepithelial lymphocytes or subepithelial collagen(Drug information on collagen) banding.

After describing the diseases’ usual presentations, Dr Osterman pointed out the following problems and exceptions to these simple distinctions between ulcerative colitis and Crohn disease:

• Discontinuous disease is not seen only in Crohn disease—it may be seen in untreated ulcerative colitis as well.  

• Rectal “sparing” may be relative: Some patients with Crohn disease have some rectal inflammation but much less than is being seen elsewhere in the bowel. Conversely, rectal sparing may occur in untreated ulcerative colitis.

• Transmural inflammation may be seen in fulminant ulcerative colitis, if fissuring ulcers develop.

• Superficial inflammation does not always mean ulcerative colitis; it is sometimes seen in Crohn disease as well.

• Aphthous ulcers are not confined to Crohn disease, where they are more common.  They also are found in 17% of ulcerative colitis colectomy specimens.

• Diffuse enteritis, usually associated with Crohn disease, often is seen after ulcerative colitis colectomy.

• Up to 25% of patients with ulcerative colitis may have skin tags.

• Granulomas sometimes are seen in ulcerative colitis.

These points provided attendees withd a more nuanced and complex understanding of the differential diagnosis.

Further evidence for overlap between ulcerative colitis and Crohn disease is seen in reports of patients with ulcerative colitis who transition to Crohn disease over time (the median time to change in diagnosis was 4 years in the study cited). This correlates with evidence for overlap in genetic markers for ulcerative colitis and Crohn disease; 110 of 163 known IBD loci are common to both diseases.

Given the ambiguities in diagnosis, Dr Osterman suggested that antibody serologies may eventually play a larger role distinguishing ulcerative colitis from Crohn disease.

 

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