The Optimal Management of Fistulizing Crohn’s Disease: Evidence beyond Randomized Clinical Trials
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Medical Treatment for Fistulizing CD
2.1. What Is the Evidence of Anti-TNF Therapy from RCTs and beyond RCT?
2.1.1. Infliximab
2.1.2. Adalimumab
2.1.3. Certolizumab Pegol
2.2. What Is the Optimal Timing for Anti-TNF Treatment in Fistulizing CD?
2.3. What Is the Evidence Regarding New Biologics in Fistulizing CD?
2.3.1. Ustekinumab
2.3.2. Vedolizumab
2.3.3. New Biological and Small Molecules Therapy Options for Fistulizing CD
2.4. Do You Need to Use Combination Therapy for Optimizing Outcomes in Fistulizing CD?
2.4.1. Combined Anti-TNF and Antibiotics
2.4.2. Combined Anti-TNF and Immunomodulators
2.4.3. Combination of Dual Biologics Therapy
2.5. Are Biologics, Immunosuppressives and Combination Therapy Safe to Use in Fistulizing CD?
2.6. Is Therapeutic Drug Monitoring (TDM) Helpful in Optimize Treatment for Fistulizing CD?
2.7. Is a Seton Required in the Long-Term or Short-Term as a Combination Therapy?
3. Medical Treatment for Non-Perianal Fistulizing CD
3.1. Internal Fistula of GI Tract
3.2. Enterovesical Fistula
3.3. Rectovaginal Fistula
3.4. Enterocutaneous Fistula
4. Surgical Management of Fistulizing CD
4.1. Seton Drainage
4.2. Fistulotomy and Ligation of the Intersphincteric Fistula Tract (LIFT)
4.3. Advancement Flap, Fistula Plug and Fibrin Glue
4.4. Fecal Diversion and Proctectomy
4.5. Mesenchymal Stem Cell Therapy
5. Optimizing Strategies for Medical and Surgical Treatment of Fistulizing CD
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Study, Year | Study Design | No. | Fistula Type (%) | Intervention and/or Comparator | Study Endpoint (Duration) | Main Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Infliximab (IFX) | ||||||
Present et al., 1999 [21] | RCT | 94 | Perianal (90%) Abdominal (10%) | IFX (56) vs. PBO (29) | Fistula response: 50% closure, fistula remission: 100% closure (18 months) | Fistula response rate: IFX 62% vs. PBO 26% (p = 0.002) fistula remission rate: IFX 46% vs. PBO 13% (p = 0.001) |
Sands 2004 (ACCENT II) [22] | RCT | 282 | Perianal (87%), abdominal (11%), rectovaginal (8%) | IFX (96) vs. PBO (99) | Time to the loss of response in maintenance phase (14 and 54 weeks) | IFX > 40 weeks vs. PBO 14 weeks (p < 0.001), complete response rate at 54 weeks: (IFX 36% vs. PBO 19%, p = 0.009). |
West et al., 2004 [23] | RCT | 24 | Perianal (100%) | IFX + CIP (11) vs. IFX + PBO (13) | Response: 50% reduction in the number of draining fistulas (18 weeks) | The higher response rate in IFX + CIP; 73% vs. IFX + PBO; 39%, p = 0.12 |
Bouguen et al., 2013 [24] | Retrospective | 156 | Perianal (100%) | IFX + AZA (90) vs. IFX alone (66) | Fistula closure (5 years) | Combined therapy was associated with an increased rate of fistula closure (HR 2.58, 1.16–5.6; p = 0.02) |
Zhu et al., 2021 [25] | Retrospective | 178 | Perianal (100%) | IFX (178) | Clinical and radiological (MRI) (135 weeks) | Clinical remission and response: 55.1% and 26.4%, radiological remission and response: 38.2% and 34.3%, respectively |
Lee at al., 2018 [26] | Meta-analysis | 432 | Perianal and non-perianal fistulas | Six studies Anti-TNFs (267) vs. PBO (165) | Fistula remission and response | Induction remission rates; anti-TNFs 34% (90/267) vs. PBO 16% (26/165). Pooled RR: 2.01 (95% CI, 1.36–2.97, p < 0.001). In the maintenance therapy, fistula remission: anti-TNFs 35% (43/124) vs. PBO 18% (23/129), pooled RR: 1.94 (95% CI, 1.25–3.02, p = 0.003) |
Adalimumab (ADA) | ||||||
Hanauer et al., 2006 (Classic I) [27] | RCT | 32 | Perianal, enterocutaneous (NS) | ADA (26) vs. PBO (6) | Response: 50% closure, remission: 100% closure (4 weeks) | No significant difference in fistula healing rates ADA vs. PBO |
Sandborn et al., 2007 (GAIN) [28] | RCT | 45 | Perianal, abdominal (NS) | ADA (20) vs. PBO (25) | Response: 50% closure, remission 100% closure (4 weeks) | No difference in fistula response: ADA 15% vs. PBO 20% and remission: ADA 5% vs. PBO 8%. |
Colombel J.F. et al., 2009 (CHARM) [29,30] | RCT and post hoc | 117 | Perianal (97%), abdominal (3%) | ADA (70) vs. PBO (47) | Fistula healing (100% closure) (2 years) | At 26 weeks: ADA 30% vs. PBO 13%, p = 0.043, and at 52 weeks: ADA 33% vs. PBO 13%, p = 0.016, and 90% of patients who had fistula healing maintained healing until 2 years |
Dewint et al., 2014 (ADAFI) [31] | RCT | 76 | Perianal (100%) | ADA + CIP (36) vs. ADA (34) | Fistula response: 50% closer, remission: 100% closure (12 and 24 weeks) | Fistula response at 12 weeks: ADA + CIP 71% and ADA + PBO 47%, p = 0.047and remission: ADA + CIP 65% and ADA + PBO 33%, p = 0.009. The response was not maintained at 24 weeks. |
Lichtiger et al., 2010 (CHOICE) [32] | phase IIIb single-arm | 88 | Perianal (93%), enterocutaneous (13%) | ADA (88) | Fistula healing: 100% closure (36 weeks) | Fistula healing rate: 39% during a follow-up visit (4–36 weeks) |
Castaňo-Milla et el., 2015 [33] | Retrospective | 46 | Perianal (100%) | ADA (46) | Fistula healing and response (6 and 12 months) | Fistula responses: 72% and 49% of patients at 6 and 12 months, respectively |
Ji and Takano et al., 2017 [34] | Retrospective | 47 | Perianal (100%) | ADA (16) vs. IFX (31) | Recurrence-free and disease progression (2 years) | No significant difference between IFX 83.9% vs. ADA 62.5%, p = 0.09 |
Ustekinumab (UST) | ||||||
Sand 2017 (UNITI-1, UNITI-2, CERTIFI) [35] | Posthoc analysis | 238 | Perianal (100%) | UST (161) vs. PBO (77) | Fistula healing: 100% closure, response: 50% closure (8 weeks) | Fistula healing: UST 24.7% vs. 14.1% PBO (p = 0.073); no significant fistula response between the groups. |
Chapuis-Biron et al., 2020 (LioLAP) [36] | Retrospective | 207 | Perianal (100%) | UST 207 | Success rate: no need for surgical or additional treatment (52 weeks) | In patients with active fistula, success rate: 38.5% (57/148), successful seton removal: 33% (29/88), and recurrence-free survival: 75.1%. |
Ma et al., 2017 [37] | Retrospective | 45 | Perianal (100%) | UST (45) | Completed healing on imaging (12 months) | 31.1% of patients achieved complete radiologic healing (MRI or contrast-enhanced pelvic ultrasound) |
Biemans et al., 2020 [38] | Prospective observational | 28 | Perianal (100%) | UST (28) | Fistula response and remission (24 weeks) | Complete clinical remission: 35.7% and clinical response: 14.3% |
Attauabi et al., 2020 [39] | Meta-analysis | 396 | Perianal (100%) | Nine studies UST (396) | Fistula response and remission (52 weeks) | The pooled fistula response: 41.0%, 39.7%, and 55.9% at weeks 8, 24, and 52, respectively. Pooled fistula remission: 17.1%, 17.7%, and 16.7% at week 8, 24, and 52, respectively. |
Brewer et al., 2021 [40] | Meta-analysis | 209 | Perianal (100%) | 25 studies UST (209) | Fistula response (6 and 12 months) | Clinical response: 44% and 53.9% at 6 and 12 months, respectively |
Vedolizumab (VDZ) | ||||||
Feagan et al., 2018 (GEMINI 2) [41] | Post hoc analysis | 57 | Perianal (79%), NS (21%) | VDZ (39) vs. PBO (18) | Fistula closure; no drainage (14 and 52 weeks) | Fistula closure at week 14: VDZ 28% vs.. PBO 11% (ARR: 17.1%; 95% CI, −11.4 to 43.9). At week 52: VDZ 33% vs. PBO 11% (ARR: 19.7%; 95% CI, −8.9 to 46.2) |
Chapuis-Biron et al., 2020 [42] | Retrospective | 151 | Perianal (100%) | VDZ (151) | Clinical remission, seton removal and recurrence rate (6 months) | In patients with active fistula, clinical remission: 22.5%, successful seton removal: 9/61(15%), and in patients with inactive fistula, the perianal disease recurrence: 30.6% |
Ayoub et al., 2022 [43] | Meta-analysis | 198 | Perianal (100%) | Four studies VDZ (198) | Complete and partial fistula healing | The pooled complete healing rate: 27.6% (95% CI, 18.9–37.3%), pooled partial healing rate: 34.9% (95% CI, 23.2–47.7%) |
Filgotinib (FIL) | ||||||
Reinish et al., 2022 (DIVERGENCE2) [44] | RCT | 57 | Perianal (100%) | Filgotinib (42) vs. PBO (15) | Combined clinical and MRI response/remission (24 weeks) | Fistula response was numerically higher in the FIL 200 mg group (47.1%; CI: 26.0–68.9) vs. PBO group (25.0%; CI: 7.2–52.7). Fistula remission (FIL 200 mg (47.1%; CI: 26.0–68.9) vs. PBO (16.7%; CI: 3.0–43.8)) |
Therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) | ||||||
Papamichael et al., 2021 [45] | Post hoc of the ACCENT-II | 282 | Perianal (87%) Abdominal (11%), rectovaginal (8%) | IFX level high vs. low | Fistula remission (54 weeks) | The higher post-induction IFX levels were associated with remission (OR: 2.05; 95% CI: 1.10–3.82). IFX level of 15 mg/mL at week 6 and 7.2 mg/mL at week 14 stratified early fistula remission |
Yarur et al., 2017 [46] | Observational | 117 | Perianal (100%) | TDM level high vs. low | Fistula healing (29 weeks) | IFX levels: patients with healing: 15.8 ug/mL vs. no healing: 4.4 ug/mL, p < 0.001. The cut-off > 10.1 mcg/mL and >20.3 mcg/mL predict fistula healing 3- and 8-fold, respectively. |
Gregorio et al., 2021 [47] | Retrospective | 193 | Perianal (100%) | TDM level in active vs. remission | Radiologic response on MRI (2.1 years ADA, 2.5 years IFX) | Anti-TNF levels in patients with MRI remission vs. active disease: IFX; 7.4 vs. 3.9 mg/mL; and ADA; 9.8 vs. 6.2 mg/mL. |
Study, Year | Study Design | No. | Treatments | Study Endpoints (Duration) | Main Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. Internal fistula of GI tract | |||||
Bouguen et al., 2020 [101] | Retrospective | 156 | Anti-TNF, IFX (75%), ADA (25%) | Fistula healing and need for surgery (3.5 years) | The fistula healing rates on MRI were 15%, 32% and 44% at 1, 3, and 5 years, respectively. In total, 43.6% of patients required surgery in a period of 3.5 years |
Kobayashi et al., 2017 [102] | Retrospective | 93 | Anti-TNF, IFX (74%), ADA (26%) | Need for surgery and fistula closure (5 years) | Surgery rate was 47.2% and fistula closure rate was 27.0% at 5 years. Only single fistulas were associated with successful fistula closure. |
2. Enterovesical fistula | |||||
Taxonera et al., 2016 [103] | Retrospective | 97 | Anti-TNF (35%) | Fistula remission by clinical and imaging (35 months) | In total, 45% of patients achieved remission without needing surgery (HR 0.23, 95% CI 0.12–0.44). |
Kaimakliotis et al., 2016 [104] | Systematic review (five studies) | 14 | Anti-TNFs | Fistula closure | In total, 7.1% of patients had a complete response, 35.7% partial response and 7.1% no response. |
3. Rectovaginal fistula | |||||
Kaimakliotis et al., 2016 [104] | Systematic review (nine studies) | 78 | Anti-TNFs | Fistula closure and response (1 year) | A total of 41.0% of patients had complete response, 21.8% partial response and 37.2% no response. |
Le Baut et al., 2018 [105] | Retrospective | 204 | IFX (79%), ADA (20%), certolizumab (1%) | Fistula closure and response (1 year) | A total of 37% of patients had complete fistula closure, 22% partial response and 41% no response. Only complementary surgery was associated with better response (RR 2.02, 95% CI: 1.25–3.26). |
4. Enterocutaneous fistula | |||||
Amiot et al., 2014 [106] | Retrospective | 48 | Anti-TNFs | Fistula closure (3 years) | In total, 33% of patients had complete closure, of whom 50% relapsed and 54% needed surgery |
Parsi et al., 2004 [107] | Retrospective | 14 | IFX | Fistula closure (9 months) | A total of 38% of patients had complete cessation of EC fistula drainage |
Study, Year | Design | No. | Intervention and Comparator | Study Endpoint | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wasmann et al., 2020 (PISA) [91] | RCT | 44 | IFX (15) vs. seton (15) vs. surgical closure (14) | Fistula related re-intervention (1.5 years) and disease activity | Seton treatment was associated with the highest re-intervention rate (10/15, vs. 6/15); anti-TNF and 3/14 surgical closure patients, p = 0.02. No differences in perianal disease activity and QoL between the three groups |
Panés et al., 2016, 2022 (ADMIRE-CD and INSPECT) [116,117,118] | RCT and post hoc analysis | 212 | Darvadstrocel (107) vs. control (105) | Combined clinical and MRI remission (24, 52, 104 and 156 week) | RCT: at week 24, combined remission; darvadstrocel 50% vs. control 34%, p = 0.024 Post-hoc: at weeks 52, 104 and 156. Clinical remission 67.4%, 53.5% and 53.5% of 43 darvadstrocel-treated patients, compared with 52.2%, 43.5% and 45.7% of 46 in the control group, respectively. |
Abramowitz et al., 2021 [119] | RCT | 64 | Surgical closure (33, 79% had glue) vs. control (31) | Fistula closure: no seton and no draining fistula (12 months) | Fistular closure: surgical closure 56% vs. control group 65%, p = 0.479. In the surgical closure group, fistula closure: 52% in complex and 71% in simple fistula. |
Yassin et al., 2014 [120] | Meta-analysis (24 studies) | 1139 | Combination of medical with surgery (679) vs. medical/surgical alone (460) | Fistula healing | Complete remission rates: single therapy 43% vs. combination 52%. |
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Wetwittayakhlang, P.; Al Khoury, A.; Hahn, G.D.; Lakatos, P.L. The Optimal Management of Fistulizing Crohn’s Disease: Evidence beyond Randomized Clinical Trials. J. Clin. Med. 2022, 11, 3045. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11113045
Wetwittayakhlang P, Al Khoury A, Hahn GD, Lakatos PL. The Optimal Management of Fistulizing Crohn’s Disease: Evidence beyond Randomized Clinical Trials. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2022; 11(11):3045. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11113045
Chicago/Turabian StyleWetwittayakhlang, Panu, Alex Al Khoury, Gustavo Drügg Hahn, and Peter Laszlo Lakatos. 2022. "The Optimal Management of Fistulizing Crohn’s Disease: Evidence beyond Randomized Clinical Trials" Journal of Clinical Medicine 11, no. 11: 3045. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11113045
APA StyleWetwittayakhlang, P., Al Khoury, A., Hahn, G. D., & Lakatos, P. L. (2022). The Optimal Management of Fistulizing Crohn’s Disease: Evidence beyond Randomized Clinical Trials. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 11(11), 3045. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11113045