Crohn Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Description of Perianal Lesions in a Cohort of Crohn's Disease Patients
The perianal lesions (LAP) specific for Crohn's disease have been reported in 1938, six years after the first cases of luminal disease. If phenotypic data of the latter are well documented today, those of perianal disease remain inadequately described. The reasons are numerous: understated symptoms by patients, elementary semiotics proctology ignored by practitioners, lack of validated classifications to track these violations and challenges to undertake clinical trials to high standard of proof in view of these variables, etc. ... Moreover, the impact of these LAP varies across studies (10-80%). in addition to the above-mentioned reasons, these results are also due to the different definitions of LAP used in the studies, their collection in reference centers versus tertiary centers, their potential occurrence at any time of disease progression, their greater frequency in case of distal disease (12% for infringement isolated ileal, 15% in breach ileo colic, 41% in case of colonic involvement and 91% in case of rectal involvement). Yet the specific LAP should be better documented because they are a factor of poor prognosis of Crohn's disease.
The perianal lesions (LAP) specific for Crohn's disease have been reported in 1938, six years
after the first cases of luminal disease. If phenotypic data of the latter are well
documented today, those of perianal disease remain inadequately described. The reasons are
numerous: understated symptoms by patients, elementary semiotics proctology ignored by
practitioners, lack of validated classifications to track these violations and challenges to
undertake clinical trials to high standard of proof in view of these variables, etc. ...
Moreover, the impact of these LAP varies across studies (10-80%). in addition to the
above-mentioned reasons, these results are also due to the different definitions of LAP used
in the studies, their collection in reference centers versus tertiary centers, their
potential occurrence at any time of disease progression, their greater frequency in case of
distal disease (12% for infringement isolated ileal, 15% in breach ileo colic, 41% in case of
colonic involvement and 91% in case of rectal involvement). Yet the specific LAP should be
better documented because they are a factor of poor prognosis of Crohn's disease.
In practice, Crohn's disease specific LAP are described in the UFS Cardiff classification.
She is currently the most used even if the inter-observer reproducibility has never been
demonstrated. This is an anatomical and pathophysiological classification distinguishes two
types of LAP: primary, specific lesions (cracks and ulcers), and secondary lesions,
consequences of mechanical complications (strictures) or infectious (fistulas and abscesses)
lesions primary. The cracks are often multiple, broad and deep base and may occur in any
quadrant of the anus. They may be painless and are not usually associated with sphincter
hypertension. They constitute 20 to 35% of the LAP. Ulcerations realize profound substance of
losses, based on an inflammatory tissue banks and have loosened, edematous. They often focus
on the sub-pectineal portion of the anal canal and have an extension in height and depth.
They are rarer: 5 to 10% of LAP. Stenoses are either functional, due to sphincter spasm and
then reversible or organic, short or long fibrous membrane and irreversible. They usually
occur after healing of ductal ulcers or abscesses. They represent 35% of the LAP. Fistulas
may be secondary to infection of an anal gland Hermann and Desfosses or complicate a crack or
anorectal ulcer. These are the most common LAP: 50 to 70%.
The epidemiology of non-specific LAP, ie "non-primary" and "no side", in Crohn's disease
patients is even more unclear. However, the management of these lesions in patients at high
risk of incontinence and for whom quality of life is affected by their chronic disease should
be subject to special precautions. Prevalence of hemorrhoidal disease, estimated at 7% in a
recent study, so is probably undervalued. The conservative therapeutic approach is consensus
even though some recent studies have shown no complications after hemorrhoidectomy in
patients with quiescent disease. Crohn's disease patients also have an excess risk poorly
quantified develop various skin lesions anoperineal: secondary lesions to chronic diarrhea,
fungal infections, contact dermatitis, paradoxical reactions to anti-TNF, autoimmune diseases
associated, etc ... Finally, the effect of immunosuppression on the risk of anal cancer in
Crohn's disease patients (with or without LAP) is not clearly known. Several authors have
demonstrated an excess risk of infections Papillomavirus and intraepithelial neoplastic
lesions of the anus in transplant treated with azathioprine and there is a risk of
degeneration in severe injuries, and old chronicles. Monitoring could therefore be necessary
in these sub-immune suppressor patients in the long term but there are currently no
recommendations.
In short, the specific LAP or not Crohn's disease are poorly understood although their
presence worsens the quality of life of patients and in some cases, is a factor of poor
prognosis luminal disease. The purpose of this study is to describe the set of LAP (including
specific or non-inflammatory disease lesions) in a cohort of patients with Crohn's disease.
Study Objectives
- accurately describe the LAP primary, secondary and "non-primary, not secondary" Crohn's
patient cohort and obtain data including:
- The type of injury
- Their proportion
- The treatment they have already been
- Their impact on anal continence
- Their impact on quality of life
- Their field occurrence
- The phenotypic profile of the associated luminal disease.
- establish a possible causal link between certain lesions and certain treatments.
- identify some injuries possibly worse prognosis.
Methodology
- non-interventional study
- prospective cohort.
- multicenter recruitment.
- Data collection in two steps:
- In consultation:
- initials, sex and patient age
- phone
- tobaccological profile
- potential obstetric and surgical history
- intestinal transit (across Bristol)
- Data from the proctology examination (nonspecific lesions and classification
UFS Cardiff)
- activity profile of specific LAP (PDAI score Irvine)
- impact of LAP on anal incontinence (Wexner score)
- phenotypic profile of the luminal disease (classification of Montreal)
- activity profile of luminal disease (Harvey-Bradshaw Index)
- impact on quality of life (GIQLI the questionnaire)
- previous treatments, current or proposed amendment if, Crohn's disease and LAP
- serum CRP.
- By phone, if necessary, in a second time to complete any missing data.
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