Crohn's disease (CD) is a chronic gastrointestinal inflammatory disease characterized by relapse and progression. The incidence and prevalence of IBD are increasing in different regions around the world, indicating its emergence as a global disease. Though modern medical therapies including immunomodulators and biologic agents have revolutionized treatment of CD, the occurrence of steroids-dependence and resistance or intolerance to medical therapy is quite common. The limitation of present therapeutic management and the high expense of biologic agents leads to the treatment of CD become "refractoriness". The occurrence rate of steroids-dependence and resistance or intolerance to thiopurine therapy is quite high during the course of CD. Approximately 38% of cases required surgery within 10 years. Therefore, the management of such refractory CD remains a great therapeutic challenge for clinicians. Thalidomide is an oral agent that has immunomodulatory, antiangiogenic and TNF(tumor necrosis factor)-a- suppressing effects. The potential role for thalidomide in the treatment of refractory paediatric and adult CD has been investigated in more and more small open-label studies and retrospective case series. Recently, a randomized controlled trial showed thalidomide improved clinical remission at 8 weeks of treatment and longer-term maintenance of remission in pediatric refractory CD. Gerich et al reported in a retrospective study that thalidomide improved long-term outcomes among 37 refractory CD adults followed up for a median of 58 months. However, the dose of thalidomide used in these studies ranged from 50mg/d to 150mg/d, and the occurrence rate of side effects reported variously but all quite high. The side effects related to the dose of thalidomide were the major concerns of using it in CD. Moreover, the effect of thalidomide on endoscopic response including mucosal healing which is a more objective and important outcome in CD was rarely reported. Therefore the aim of this study is to investigate the efficacy on clinical and endoscopic response and the adverse effects of using low-dose thalidomide in active adult CD patients.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
47
The First Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-Sen University
Guangzhou, Guangdong, China
Clinical remission
Clinical remission is defined as CDAI (Crohn's disease activity index) less than 150.
Time frame: 8 weeks
clinical response and endoscopic efficacy
Clinical response was defined as a decrease in CDAI score of ≥100 points from baseline. Endoscopic efficacy was reassessed by ileocolonoscopy at week 24. Endoscopic outcome measures included endoscopic response (decrease in CDEIS score \>5 points from baseline of CDEIS of 6 or more), complete remission (CDEIS score \<3) and mucosal healing (no ulcer)response was defined as a decrease in CDAI score of ≥100 points from baseline. Endoscopic efficacy was reassessed by ileocolonoscopy at week 24. Endoscopic outcome measures included endoscopic response (decrease in CDEIS score \>5 points from baseline of CDEIS of 6 or more), complete remission (CDEIS score \<3) and mucosal healing (no ulcer)
Time frame: 24 weeks
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