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Italian Expert Panel on the management of patients with coexisting spondyloarthritis and inflammatory bowel disease

Authors :
Fabiana Castiglione
Ignazio Olivieri
Raffaele Scarpa
Maurizio Vecchi
Paolo Gionchetti
Alessandro Armuzzi
Carla Felice
Carlo Salvarani
Ambrogio Orlando
Fabrizio Cantini
Olivieri I
Cantini F
Castiglione F
Felice C
Gionchetti P
Orlando A
Salvarani C
Scarpa R
Vecchi M
Armuzzi A
Ignazio, Olivieri
Fabrizio, Cantini
Castiglione, Fabiana
Carla, Felice
Paolo, Gionchetti
Ambrogio, Orlando
Carlo, Salvarani
Scarpa, Raffaele
Maurizio, Vecchi
Alessandro, Armuzzi
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2014.

Abstract

Spondyloarthritis (SpA) is a group of diseases with similar clinical, radiologic and serologic features, including SpA associated with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD-associated SpA). Several studies have estimated the occurrence of SpA in IBD patients as ranging from 17% to 39%, confirming that SpA is the most frequent extra-intestinal manifestation in patients with IBD. In this paper, the expert panel presents some red flags to guide clinicians - both rheumatologists and gastroenterologists - to make a correct diagnosis of IBD-associated SpA in clinical practice. IBD-associated SpA classification, clinical presentation and diagnostic work-up are also presented. From the therapeutic point of view, only separate recommendations/guidelines are currently available for the treatment of Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis and for both axial and peripheral SpA. However, when IBD and SpA coexist, the therapeutic strategy should be modulated to take into account the variable manifestations of IBD in terms of intestinal and extra-intestinal features, and the clinical manifestations of SpA, with particular attention to peripheral enthesitis, dactylitis and anterior uveitis. To our knowledge, this is the first attempt to define therapeutic algorithms for the integrated management of different IBD-associated SpA clinical scenarios.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bc09b9359cd648a33323157c79233764