Ulcerative colitis Flashcards
What is UC?
This is a type of IBD that characteristically involves the rectum and extends proximally to affect a variable length of the colon.
Recognised as a multifactorial polygenic disease, as the exact cause is still unknown,
Diffuse inflammation of the colonic mucosa and a relapsing, remitting course.
Aetiology of UC
Occurs in genetically susceptible people in response to environmental triggers.
It is probably an autoimmune disease initiated by an inflammatory response to colonic bacteria.
Pathophysiology of UC
Macroscopically, most cases arise in the rectum, with some patients developing terminal ileitis (i.e. extending up to 30cm) due to an incompetent ileocaecal valve or backwash ileitis.
Microscopically, UC usually involves only the mucosa, with the formation of crypt abscesses and a coexisting depletion of goblet cell.
Classification of UC
UC is classified by severity:
S0: clinical remission (asymptomatic)
S1 (mild UC): the passage of ≤4 stools per day (with or without blood), absence of any systemic illness, and normal levels of inflammatory markers (erythrocyte sedimentation rate [ESR])
S2 (moderate UC): the passage of >4 stools per day but with minimal signs of systemic toxicity
S3 (severe UC): the passage of ≥6 bloody stools daily, pulse rate of at least 90 bpm, the temperature of at least 37.5°C (99.5°F), a haemoglobin level of <105g/L (10.5 g/dL), and ESR of at least 30 mm/hour.
Signs & Symptoms of UC
Rectal bleeding Diarrhoea Blood in stool Abdominal pain Arthritis and spondylitis Malnutrition Abdominal tenderness Fever Weight loss Pallor Uveitis and episcleritis Skin rash
Risk factors of UC
FHx of IBD HLA-B27 Infection NSAIDs (cause a flare-up) Not smoking
Investigations of UC
Stool studies (negative culture and C.dif toxins A &B, WBC present, elevated faecal calprotectin)
FBC (variable degree of anaemia)
Comprehensive metabolic panel (including LFTs)
ESR- >30 mm/hour suggests flare up
CRP- variable degree of elevation
Plain abdominal radiograph- dilated loops
Flexible sigmoidscopy/colonoscopy
Biopsies
Double-contrast barium enema
Differentials of UC
Crohn's disease Indeterminate colitis Radiation colitis Infectious colitis Diverticulitis IBS Mesenteric ischaemia/ ischaemic colitis Vasculitis Prolonges use of cathortics
Management of UC
This depends if there is an acute flare-up or for maintaining remission.
Treatment of fulminant disease in UC
The fulminant disease is described as >10 stools, massive bleeding and severe system toxicity.
Treatment of this include:
-Admission + IV steroids (hydrocortisone or methylprednisolone)
-IV fluids
-Ciclosporin or infliximab (if the response to steroids isn’t great)
What is infliximab?
Infliximab belongs to a group of medicines called ‘biological drugs.’
It is also referred to as an ‘anti-TNF drug’ because it works by targeting a protein in the body called TNF-alpha.
Your body naturally produces TNF-alpha as part of its immune response to help fight infections by temporarily causing inflammation in affected areas.
Over-production of this protein is thought to be partly responsible for the type of chronic (ongoing) inflammation found in Crohn’s and Colitis.
Infliximab binds to TNF-alpha, helping to prevent inflammation and relieve symptoms.
Infliximab is recommended as an option for the treatment of acute exacerbations of severely active ulcerative colitis only in patients in whom ciclosporin is contraindicated or clinically inappropriate.
Treatment of severe non-fulminant disease
Topical + oral mesalazine (aminosalicylate)
Oral steroids (prednisolone)
If symptoms persist: Admission + IV steroids
Colectomy is the last line of treatment.
Remission in proctitis (mild to moderate)
To induce remission in people with a mild-to-moderate first presentation or inflammatory exacerbation of proctitis, Offer a topical aminosalicylate as first-line treatment.
If remission is not achieved within 4 weeks, consider adding an oral aminosalicylate.
If further treatment is needed, consider adding a time-limited course of a topical or an oral corticosteroid.
Remission in proctosigmoiditis and left-sided ulcerative colitis: mild to moderate
Offer a topical aminosalicylate as first-line treatment.
If remission is not achieved within 4 weeks, consider:
adding a high-dose oral aminosalicylate to the topical aminosalicylate or
switching to a high-dose oral aminosalicylate and a time-limited course of a topical corticosteroid.
If further treatment is needed, stop topical treatments and offer an oral aminosalicylate and a time-limited course of an oral corticosteroid.
Remission in extensive ulcerative colitis: mild to moderate
Offer a topical aminosalicylate and a high-dose oral aminosalicylate as first-line treatment.
If remission is not achieved within 4 weeks, stop the topical aminosalicylate and offer a high-dose oral aminosalicylate with a time-limited course of an oral corticosteroid.
For people who cannot tolerate aminosalicylates, consider a time-limited course of an oral corticosteroid.