Severity of Inflammation as a Predictor of Colectomy in Patients With Chronic Ulcerative Colitis

PURPOSE:We evaluated a large cohort of patients with longstanding ulcerative colitis in a colonoscopic surveillance program to determine predictors of colectomy. METHODS:We queried a retrospective database of patients who had symptoms of ulcerative colitis for seven years or more. Histologic inflamm...

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Veröffentlicht in:Diseases of the colon & rectum 2009-02, Vol.52 (2), p.193-197
Hauptverfasser: Hefti, Marco M, Chessin, David B, Harpaz, Noam H, Steinhagen, Randolph M, Ullman, Thomas A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:PURPOSE:We evaluated a large cohort of patients with longstanding ulcerative colitis in a colonoscopic surveillance program to determine predictors of colectomy. METHODS:We queried a retrospective database of patients who had symptoms of ulcerative colitis for seven years or more. Histologic inflammation in biopsies was graded on a validated four-point scaleabsent, mild, moderate, severe. We performed a multivariate analysis of the inflammation scores and other variables to determine predictive factors for colectomy. Patients who underwent colectomy for neoplasia were censored at the time of surgery; those who did not undergo colectomy were censored at the time of last contact. RESULTS:A total of 561 patients were evaluated, with a median follow-up of 21.4 years since disease onset. A total of 97 patients (17.3 percent) underwent surgery; 25 (4.5 percent) for reasons other than dysplasia. These 25 constitute events for this analysis. For univariate analysis, mean inflammation (P < 0.001) and steroid use (P = 0.01) were predictors of colectomy. For multivariable proportional hazards analysis, mean inflammation (P < 0.001) and steroid use (P = 0.03) were predictors of colectomy, whereas salicylate use (P = 0.007) was protective. CONCLUSIONS:Higher median inflammation scores and corticosteroid use were predictors of colectomy in this patient population. The overall rate of colectomy during a long period of follow-up was low (
ISSN:0012-3706
1530-0358
DOI:10.1007/DCR.0b013e31819ad456