Evaluation of Ability to Detect Bowel Gas During Laparoscopic Right Colectomy With Intracorporeal...
Crohn's Disease of Large IntestineMalignant Neoplasm of ColonUndetected bowel perforation is a rare but dangerous complication of laparoscopic surgery. If the injury is not detected and treated at the time of the surgical procedure, the patient can suffer severe complications, including septic shock and eventually death. The investigator's goal is to test a novel device that can detect bowel gas leakage from perforation and alert the surgeon during the operation by evaluating the gases present in the insufflated abdomen during surgery. This study will determine the ability of the device to be attached to a standard trocar during the operation and periodically draw small samples or aliquots of gas from the abdomen to evaluate the gas and accurately detect gaseous content from the bowel. Before the device can be used to detect bowel perforations, the investigators must first ensure that it can accurately detect bowel gas in an insufflated abdomen.
Cellvizio to Evaluate Margins in Crohn's Ileal Disease
Crohn DiseaseResection Margins1 moreCrohn disease is an inflammatory bowel disease. A surgical procedure is required in about 80% of cases. Surgery doesn't cure from Crohn's disease but the type of surgery remains important as there are several intraoperative risk factors for recurrence. Among these factors the microscopic inflammation at the resection margins. This is a crucial point, if the resection is too large there is a risk of short bowel syndrome, if the resection is too short (microscopic inflammation at resection site), there is a higher risk of postoperative recurrence (75% vs 46% at 18 months). Surgeons have to do a limited resection (2cm from macroscopic crohn disease). However this macroscopic non inflammatory resection margin can be microscopically inflammatory (up to 80%). Thus it is useful to evaluate if there is a microscopic inflammation at the resection margin. Moreover there is an increase interest for the role of the mesentery for recurrence but its role remains unclear. It is of interest to clarify the border between the inflammatory and non-inflammatory mesentery. Cellvizio is a confocal laser endomicroscopy providing the possibility of obtaining in vivo high-magnification images of the gut epithelium. This allows real-time examination of the gastrointestinal mucosa at the cellular and subcellular level. Cellvizio has never been used during surgery for Crohn disease. The aim of this study is to evaluate the intraoperative use of Cellvizio (using the CelioFlex microsonde) with an intravenous injection of fluorescein to determine the best ileal resection margins in Crohn disease.
Assessment of Intestinal Inflammation by Infrared Thermography in Pediatric Crohn Disease
Crohn DiseaseInfrared Thermography1 moreThe assessment of digestive inflammation and disease activity in paediatrics Crohn's disease (CD) is currently based on anamnestic, clinical and paraclinical elements such as the paediatric CD activity index (wPCDAI) , faecal calprotectin measuring or digestive endoscopy. Infrared thermal imaging is based on capturing electromagnetic waves, on a specific Wavelength, emitted by the human body surface and representing local thermic-metabolic activity. It concern metabolic activity in digestive inflammations. Infrared imaging is a non-invasive, contactless, stressless technique that assess the variations in skin surface temperature of the patient's entire abdomen or more targeted areas in a single photography. This technique would be useful for determination of Crohn's disease activity, inflammation's degree and partial mapping of inflammatory lesions. In a specific room with a patient lying, the investigators will determine the abdominal infrared radiation with a FLIR® thermal camera. This will be correlated with the measurement of the faecal calprotectin concentration and the composite CD activity index wPCDAI. All measurements will be performed during the standard follow-up of Crohn disease. No additional follow will be necessary.
Dietary Therapy and Gut Microbiome in Crohn's Disease and Ulcerative Colitis
Crohn's DiseaseThe study is proposed as a 2-year single site, open-label clinical trial of enteral nutrition or the specific carbohydrate diet in patients with active CD or UC. Patients seeking care in the outpatient clinics of the Division of Gastroenterology at Massachusetts General Hospital will be approached for participation in the trial during their routine outpatient appointments. All patients are required to have a diagnosis of CD or UC confirmed using standard clinical, endoscopic, and histologic criteria. Eligible patients will complete an office visit to confirm eligibility for the study and informed consent will be obtained. They will then be scheduled for a routine colonoscopy as part of their standard clinical care to objectively confirm active disease and obtain biopsies for microbiome and gene expression. The investigators will obtain prior authorization from the subject's insurance company for such colonoscopy, or if it is not covered by the insurance, the investigators will use study funds to pay for the procedure. They will then be assigned to one of two dietary intervention arms based on their preference and will meet with the study registered dietician at the MGH Clinical Research Center (CRC) metabolism and nutrition unit. There, they will receive instruction on the components of the assigned dietary therapy arm - partial elemental diet (enteral nutrition) or specific carbohydrate diet, and will complete a baseline food record (FR). They will adhere to the dietary therapy for 6 weeks after which they can resume normal diet. Clinical, biochemical, nutritional, and microbiological parameters will be measured during and for 6 weeks following the study. They will have 5 study visits during this time.
A Comparative Study of MRI, US and CE for Assessing Treatment Response in Known Crohn's Disease...
Crohn DiseaseThe aim of this study is to evaluate non-invasive imaging techniques for assessing treatment response in known Crohn's disease. Comparing imaging modalities: The applicability of small bowel colon capsule endoscopy (SBCCE), magnetic resonance enterocolonography (MREC) and ultrasound (US) for diagnosing ulcer healing after medical treatment in patients with symptomatic Crohn's disease compared to ileocolonoscopy. Sensitivity and specificity for ulcer healing Changes in activity parameters for SBCCE, MREC and US before and after medical treatment. Feasibility of SBCCE, MREC and US for assessing treatment response in known Crohn's disease. Treatment induced bowel wall alterations visualized with ultrasound: A non-blinded study of bowel wall changes detected with repeated US examination during medical treatment of known Crohn's disease. Changes in bowel wall thickness, vascularity and elastography parameters, and time to normalization of the bowel wall.
Study of the Kono-S Anastomosis Versus the Side-to-side Functional End Anastomosis
Crohn's DiseaseThis study proposes a randomized prospective study comparing the Kono-S anastomosis to the standard side-to-side anastomosis.This will be a multi-center randomized prospective trial. Patients with Crohn's ileitis or Crohn's ileocolitis requiring resection will be randomized to undergo either the Kono-S anastomosis or the side-to-side functional end anastomosis.
Extended Mesenteric Excision in Ileocolic Resections for Crohn's Disease.
Crohn DiseaseRecurrence1 moreThe study is looking at the role of the mesentery in disease recurrence for ileocolic Crohn's disease. It is a prospective study that has been designed to perform extended mesenteric excision on patients undergoing their first ileocolic resection for Crohn's disease. Endoscopic recurrence will be monitored with the hypothesis that patients receiving extended mesenteric ileocolic resection will have reduced endoscopic recurrence at 6 months after resection.
STUDY OF THE ADDED VALUE OF A TRANSMURAL EVALUATION IN PATIENTS WITH CROHN'S DISEASE UNDER BIOTHERAPY...
Crohn DiseaseCalprotectin1 moreCrohn's disease (CD) is a chronic inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) that can dramatically affect the quality of life of patients. Due to its transmural nature (involvement of the entire thickness of the intestinal wall), it naturally progresses to intestinal destruction (stenosis, fistula) which requires intestinal resection in approximately half of patients during their follow-up. The long-term goal for patients is to maintain a normal life, that is, without symptoms and without intestinal destruction. For this, the short and medium term therapeutic objectives have evolved in recent years. Clinical remission is not a sufficient goal since it has failed to alter the natural history of the disease. The current objective to be achieved is the combination of clinical remission and endoscopic mucosal healing since it is associated with a reduced risk of progression (reappearance of symptoms, hospitalization, intestinal resection). Fecal calprotectin, better accepted than colonoscopy, is a non-invasive biomarker of endoscopic inflammatory activity in CD. The CALM study recently showed that close follow-up with clinical and biological evaluation (assays of CRP and fecal calprotectin), called "tight control", associated with therapeutic intensification in the absence of clinical or biological remission, was associated with a better rate of endoscopic mucosal healing at 1 year than follow-up based solely on symptoms. Thus, the "CALM" strategy is considered to be the current benchmark. Transmural healing evaluated by MRI is also a promising objective associated with a reduced risk of progression (reappearance of symptoms, hospitalization, bowel resection). In addition, it could prevent intestinal destruction. A recent study by our team suggested that calprotectin (mucosal assessment) and MRI (transmural assessment) may be complementary and be a better therapeutic goal. We hypothesize that a "CALM + MRI" strategy concomitantly targeting transmural healing would be superior to the "CALM" strategy alone in maintaining clinical remission without corticosteroids in patients with CD treated with biotherapies.
Efficacy and Safety of Vedolizumab Combined With Upadacitinib in Patients With Ulcerative Colitis...
Crohn DiseaseIt's of great importance to effectively induce and maintain disease remission in patients with moderate to severe ulcerative colitis (UC). Vedolizumab (VDZ) is known for its high safety profile and confirmed therapeutic efficacy in UC treatment. However, according to the experience in clinical practice, the effect onset speed of vedolizumab is relatively slow. Upadacitinib (UPA), however, works quickly, which complements the defect of slow onset of VDZ induction. However, the safety of UPA used in situations such as infection and tumors is inferior to that of VDZ, and long-term use requires testing for the risk of adverse events such as deep vein thrombosis. Therefore, if the advantages of long-term maintenance therapy safety of VDZ and rapid induced remission of UPA are fully utilized, the combination of VDZ and UPA induction for 8 weeks, followed by the use of single drug VDZ in maintenance therapy, can maximize the clinical benefits of UC patients. Due to the lack of high-level clinical research data at home and abroad, we plan to conduct a multicenter prospective randomized controlled clinical study to provide the evidence-based basis for the efficacy analysis of the sequential treatment of moderate to severe UC patients with VDZ and UPA.
A Study in Adults With Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) Receiving Vedolizumab in the Patient Support...
Ulcerative ColitisCrohn's DiseaseThe primary reason of this study is to observe current and past treatment in adult participants receiving Vedolizumab, intravenous (IV) or subcutaneous (SC), for IBD in Brazil. There is no treatment involved in this study, this is only an observational review of past and ongoing treatment data relating to Vedolizumab treatment for IBD (including Ulcerative Colitis [UC] and Crohn's Disease [CD]).