Defining Biological Remission in Crohn’s Disease: Interest, Challenges and Future Directions

Author:

Pierre Nicolas1ORCID,Vieujean Sophie12ORCID,Peyrin-Biroulet Laurent3,Meuwis Marie-Alice12ORCID,Louis Edouard12

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Translational Gastroenterology, GIGA Institute, University of Liège , Liège , Belgium

2. Departement of Hepato-Gastroenterology and Digestive Oncology, Liège University Hospital , Liège , Belgium

3. Department of Gastroenterology and Inserm NGERE U1256, University Hospital of Nancy, University of Lorraine , Vandoeuvre-lès-Nancy , France

Abstract

Abstract In Crohn’s disease, the treat-to-target strategy has been greatly encouraged and has become a standard of care. In this context, defining the target [remission] constitutes a major stake and is fuelling the literature. Currently, clinical remission [symptom control] is no longer the only objective of treatments since it does not allow to closely control inflammation-induced tissue damage. The introduction of endoscopic remission as a therapeutic target clearly represented progress but this examination remains invasive, costly, not well accepted by patients and does not allow tight control of disease activity. More fundamentally, morphological techniques [e.g. endoscopy, histology, ultrasonography] are limited since they do not evaluate the biological activity of the disease but only its consequences. Besides, emerging evidence suggests that biological signs of disease activity could better guide treatment decisions than clinical parameters. In this context, we stress the necessity to define a novel treatment target: biological remission. Based on our previous work, we propose a conceptual definition of biological remission which goes beyond the classical normalization of inflammatory markers [C-reactive protein and faecal calprotectin]: absence of biological signs associated with the risk of short-term relapse and mid-/long-term relapse. The risk of short-term relapse seems essentially to be characterized by a persistent inflammatory state while the risk of mid-/long-term relapse implies a more heterogeneous biology. We discuss the value of our proposal [guiding treatment maintenance, escalation or de-escalation] but also the fact that its clinical implementation would require overcoming major challenges. Finally, future directions are proposed to better define biological remission.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Gastroenterology,General Medicine

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