The medical management of Crohn's disease is difficult and any pharmacotherapeutic interventions should be managed by specialists who are experts in this condition. (1)
Several agents are now available for the medical treatment of Crohn's including: (2)
Locally active corticosteroids
Systemic corticosteroids
Thiopurines (e.g., azathioprine, mercaptopurine)
Methotrexate
Biological therapies (such as tumour necrosis factor [TNF]-alpha inhibitors, integrin receptor antagonists, interleukin [IL]-12/23 antagonists)
Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors (e.g., upadacitinib)
There is clear evidence that stopping smoking reduces the risk of recurrence (1).
With respect to maintaining remission in Crohn's disease, a review concluded that (3):
Conventional medications for CD include anti-inflammatory drugs, immunosuppressants and corticosteroids. However, if the patient does not respond, or loses response to these first-line treatments, then biologic therapies such as TNF-alpha antagonists including infliximab, certolizumab pegol and adalimumab are then considered for the treatment of CD.
Top-down approaches for CD therapy, including the early use of combination therapy with biologics and immunosuppressive drugs, are increasingly being used and may provide benefit in people with complicated or extensive disease suggestive of an aggressive disease course, and those with poor prognostic factors (2)
The aim of treatment should be to induce clinical remission and to maintain remission after medical induction therapy. In clinical practice either:
References:
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