Brief Articles
Copyright ©2009 The WJG Press and Baishideng. All rights reserved.
World J Gastroenterol. Jul 28, 2009; 15(28): 3504-3510
Published online Jul 28, 2009. doi: 10.3748/wjg.15.3504
Perianal disease, small bowel disease, smoking, prior steroid or early azathioprine/biological therapy are predictors of disease behavior change in patients with Crohn’s disease
Peter Laszlo Lakatos, Zsofia Czegledi, Tamas Szamosi, Janos Banai, Gyula David, Ferenc Zsigmond, Tunde Pandur, Zsuzsanna Erdelyi, Orsolya Gemela, Janos Papp, Laszlo Lakatos
Peter Laszlo Lakatos, Tamas Szamosi, Orsolya Gemela, Janos Papp, 1st Department of Medicine, Semmelweis University, H-1083 Budapest, Hungary
Zsofia Czegledi, Tamas Szamosi, Janos Banai, Ferenc Zsigmond, Department of Gastroenterology, State Health Center, H-1062 Budapest, Hungary
Gyula David, Tunde Pandur, Zsuzsanna Erdelyi, Laszlo Lakatos, 1st Department of Medicine, Csolnoky F. County Hospital, HH8201-Veszprem, Hungary
Author contributions: Lakatos PL designed the study, collected and analyzed the data, supervised the collection, validation of patients and wrote the manuscript; Szamosi T collected the data, supervised the collection, validation of patients, and participated in writing the manuscript; Gemela O, Papp J, Banai J, Czegledi Z, Zsigmond F, David G, Pandur T, Erdelyi Z, Lakatos L collected the data and revised the manuscript; All authors have approved the final draft submitted.
Correspondence to: Peter Laszlo Lakatos, MD, PhD, 1st Department of Medicine, Semmelweis University, Koranyi str. 2/A, H-1083 Budapest, Hungary. kislakpet@bel1.sote.hu
Telephone: +36-1-2100278
Fax: +36-1-3130250
Received: March 2, 2009
Revised: June 15, 2009
Accepted: June 22, 2009
Published online: July 28, 2009
Abstract

AIM: To assess the combined effect of disease phenotype, smoking and medical therapy [steroid, azathioprine (AZA), AZA/biological therapy] on the probability of disease behavior change in a Caucasian cohort of patients with Crohn’s disease (CD).

METHODS: Three hundred and forty well-characterized, unrelated, consecutive CD patients were analyzed (M/F: 155/185, duration: 9.4 ± 7.5 years) with a complete clinical follow-up. Medical records including disease phenotype according to the Montreal classification, extraintestinal manifestations, use of medications and surgical events were analyzed retrospectively. Patients were interviewed on their smoking habits at the time of diagnosis and during the regular follow-up visits.

RESULTS: A change in disease behavior was observed in 30.8% of patients with an initially non-stricturing, non-penetrating disease behavior after a mean disease duration of 9.0 ± 7.2 years. In a logistic regression analysis corrected for disease duration, perianal disease, smoking, steroid use, early AZA or AZA/biological therapy use were independent predictors of disease behavior change. In a subsequent Kaplan-Meier survival analysis and a proportional Cox regression analysis, disease location (P = 0.001), presence of perianal disease (P < 0.001), prior steroid use (P = 0.006), early AZA (P = 0.005) or AZA/biological therapy (P = 0.002), or smoking (P = 0.032) were independent predictors of disease behavior change.

CONCLUSION: Our data suggest that perianal disease, small bowel disease, smoking, prior steroid use, early AZA or AZA/biological therapy are all predictors of disease behavior change in CD patients.

Keywords: Crohn’s disease, Smoking, Azathioprine, Infliximab, Monoclonal antibodies, Colectomy, Risk, Reoperation