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Author
- Castiglione, Fabiana2
- Danese, Silvio2
- Argollo, Marjorie1
- Armuzzi, Alessandro1
- Bardella, MT1
- Bergamini, CM1
- Biagi, Federico1
- Bonovas, Stefanos1
- Bortoli, Aurora1
- Braden, Barbara1
- Calabrese, Emma1
- Chan, Webber1
- Contaldo, Antonella1
- Corazza, Gino Roberto1
- D'Amico, Ferdinando1
- D'Incà, Renata1
- Daperno, Marco1
- Di Giorgio, Angelo1
- Di Sabatino, Antonio1
- Dietrich, Christoph1
- Elli, L1
- Fantini, Massimo Claudio1
- Fazio, Maria1
- Fiorino, Gionata1
- Fraquelli, Mirella1
Keyword
- Crohn's disease6
- Ulcerative colitis6
- Vaccination2
- Anti-TNFα1
- Autoimmune atrophic gastritis1
- Autoimmune hepatitis1
- Autoimmune liver disease1
- Autoimmune pancreatitis1
- Autoimmune sclerosing cholangitis1
- Biological marker1
- Biomarker1
- Biopsies1
- Biosimilars1
- Bowel wall1
- Calprotectin1
- Celiac disease1
- Children1
- Cholangiocarcinoma1
- Coeliac disease1
- Colitis-associated colorectal cancer1
- Collagen1
- Collagenous colitis1
- Colonoscopy1
- Complication1
Reviews
16 Results
- Review Article
Cutting edge issues in juvenile sclerosing cholangitis
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 54Issue 4p417–427Published online: July 18, 2021- Angelo Di Giorgio
- Diego Vergani
- Giorgina Mieli-Vergani
Cited in Scopus: 2Sclerosing cholangitis (SC) is a rare chronic disorder characterised by inflammation and progressive obliterative fibrosis of the intrahepatic and/or extrahepatic bile ducts. Diagnosis is based on cholangiogram showing bile duct dilatation, narrowing and obliteration of the biliary tree, and histologically, on the presence of inflammatory bile duct damage leading to periductal fibrosis. In children the most common SC is associated with strong autoimmune features, overlapping with those of autoimmune hepatitis (AIH); this form is known as autoimmune sclerosing cholangitis, ASC. - Review Article
Female reproductive health and inflammatory bowel disease: A practice-based review
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 54Issue 1p19–29Published online: June 11, 2021- The Italian Group for the Study of Inflammatory Bowel Disease Working Group:
- Alessandro Armuzzi
- Aurora Bortoli
- Fabiana Castiglione
- Antonella Contaldo
- Marco Daperno
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 2Inflammatory bowel diseases, namely ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease, occur worldwide and affect people of all ages, with a high impact on their quality of life. Sex differences in incidence and prevalence have been reported, and there are also gender-specific issues that physicians should recognize. For women, there are multiple, important concerns regarding issues of body image and sexuality, menstruation, contraception, fertility, pregnancy, breastfeeding and menopause. This practice-based review focuses on the main themes that run through the life of women with inflammatory bowel diseases from puberty to menopause. - Review ArticleOpen Access
Vaccinations in patients with inflammatory bowel disease
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 53Issue 12p1539–1545Published online: June 8, 2021- Fabio Salvatore Macaluso
- Giuseppina Liguori
- Massimo Galli
Cited in Scopus: 8Treatment of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) frequently requires administration of immunosuppressive therapies, which increases susceptibility to a number of infectious pathogens. However, many infections can be prevented by correct and appropriate utilization of vaccinations. While several guidelines have been published on vaccination schedules in patients with IBD, vaccination rates remain suboptimal and even lower than those in the general population. This is due to many factors including poor awareness of the importance of vaccines by gastroenterologists and general practitioners as well as potential prejudices of patients regarding the safety and benefits of vaccines. - Review Article
Vaccinations and inflammatory bowel disease – a systematic review
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 53Issue 9p1079–1088Published online: May 11, 2021- Webber Chan
- Ennaliza Salazar
- Teong Guan Lim
- Wan Chee Ong
- Hang Hock Shim
Cited in Scopus: 11Patients with inflammatory bowel disease(IBD) are at risk of infections, many of which are preventable with vaccinations. We performed a systematic review on various aspects of vaccination in IBD. - Review Article
From inflammation to colitis-associated colorectal cancer in inflammatory bowel disease: Pathogenesis and impact of current therapies
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 53Issue 5p558–565Published online: February 1, 2021- Massimo Claudio Fantini
- Ilaria Guadagni
Cited in Scopus: 34The risk of colorectal cancer (CRC) is higher in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Population-based data from patients with ulcerative colitis (UC) estimate that the risk of CRC is approximately 2- to 3-fold that of the general population; patients with Crohn's disease appear to have a similar increased risk. However, the true extent of colitis-associated cancer (CAC) in undertreated IBD is unclear. Data suggest that the size (i.e., severity and extent) and persistence of the inflammatory process is largely responsible for the development of CRC in IBD. - Review Article
Multidisciplinary management of the nocebo effect in biosimilar-treated IBD patients: Results of a workshop from the NOCE-BIO consensus group
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 52Issue 2p138–142Published online: December 4, 2019- Ferdinando D’Amico
- Lieven Pouillon
- Marjorie Argollo
- Ailsa Hart
- Gionata Fiorino
- Elena Vegni
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 20The high cost of biological drugs for patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) considerably impacts on health-care budgets. Since the patent of biological products expired, cheaper biosimilars have entered the market. Available data coming from real-world cohorts and clinical trials indicate that the efficacy and safety of biosimilars is comparable to that of the originator drugs. Treating IBD patients with a biosimilar may be complicated by the risk of the nocebo effect, a negative effect of a pharmacological or non-pharmacological treatment, induced by patients’s expectations and unrelated to the physiological action of the treatment. - Review Article
Impact of intestinal ultrasound on the management of patients with inflammatory bowel disease: how to apply scientific evidence to clinical practice
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 52Issue 1p9–18Published online: November 12, 2019- Mirella Fraquelli
- Fabiana Castiglione
- Emma Calabrese
- Giovanni Maconi
Cited in Scopus: 25Technological improvements and growing sonographers’ expertise boost the role of intestinal ultrasound (IUS) in assessing patients with inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD). Non-invasiveness, low cost and good reproducibility make IUS attractive. Leveraging on the Authors’ long-term field experience, this review focuses on the IUS role in IBD patients’ clinical management. For detecting IBD, particularly Crohn’s disease, the IUS parameters — above all the evidence of a thickened bowel wall (BWT) — show very good diagnostic accuracy similar to that of MRI or CT scan. - Review Article
The mycobiome: Role in health and disease, and as a potential probiotic target in gastrointestinal disease
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 49Issue 11p1171–1176Published online: October 4, 2017- Christopher L. Hager
- Mahmoud A. Ghannoum
Cited in Scopus: 56The human gastrointestinal (GI) tract is home to trillions of microorganisms, some beneficial and others potentially harmful. Recent advances in science have allowed us to identify the multitude of organisms inhabiting the GI tract and parse out those that play a role in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Unfortunately, most research has focused on studying only the bacteria while ,overlooking a key player, fungus. In order to address this issue, we have focused our efforts on studying the fungal community in the GI tract known as the mycobiome. - Review Article
The contribution of long non-coding RNAs in Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 49Issue 10p1067–1072Published online: August 9, 2017- Eirini Zacharopoulou
- Maria Gazouli
- Maria Tzouvala
- Antonios Vezakis
- George Karamanolis
Cited in Scopus: 39Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs) are multifactorial autoimmune diseases with growing prevalence but the interaction between genetic, environmental and immunologic factors in their development is complex and remains obscure. There is great need to understand their pathogenetic mechanisms and evolve diagnostic and therapeutic tools. Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) are RNA molecules longer than 200 nucleotides that are known to interfere in gene regulation but their roles and functions have not yet been fully understood. - Review Article
Endoscopic findings and colonic perforation in microscopic colitis: A systematic review
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 49Issue 10p1073–1085Published online: August 8, 2017- Wojciech Marlicz
- Karolina Skonieczna-Żydecka
- Diana E. Yung
- Igor Loniewski
- Anastasios Koulaouzidis
Cited in Scopus: 24Microscopic colitis (MC) is a clinical syndrome of severe watery diarrhea with few or no endoscopic abnormalities. The incidence of MC is reported similar to that of other inflammatory bowel diseases. The need for histological confirmation of MC frequently guides reimbursement health policies. With the advent of high-definition (HD) coloscopes, the incidence of reporting distinct endoscopic findings in MC has risen. This has the potential to improve timely diagnosis and cost-effective MC management and diminish the workload and costs of busy modern endoscopy units. - Review Article
Clinical usefulness of serum antibodies as biomarkers of gastrointestinal and liver diseases
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 49Issue 9p947–956Published online: June 22, 2017- Antonio Di Sabatino
- Federico Biagi
- Marco Lenzi
- Luca Frulloni
- Marco Vincenzo Lenti
- Paolo Giuffrida
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 35The progressively growing knowledge of the pathophysiology of a number of immune-mediated gastrointestinal and liver disorders, including autoimmune atrophic gastritis, coeliac disease, autoimmune enteropathy, inflammatory bowel disease, autoimmune hepatitis, primary sclerosing cholangitis, primary biliary cholangitis and autoimmune pancreatitis, together with the improvement of their detection methods have increased the diagnostic power of serum antibodies. In some cases – coeliac disease and autoimmune atrophic gastritis – they have radically changed gastroenterologists’ diagnostic ability, while in others – autoimmune hepatitis, inflammatory bowel disease and autoimmune pancreatitis – their diagnostic performance is still inadequate. - Review Article
Adalimumab in ulcerative colitis: Ready for prime time
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 45Issue 1p8–13Published online: July 4, 2012- Silvio Danese
Cited in Scopus: 8Ulcerative colitis is one of the two main types of inflammatory bowel disease and is a chronic condition with a significant impact on health-related quality of life. For many patients, currently available treatment options do not provide adequate efficacy or are poorly tolerated. Efforts to identify new agents for the treatment of ulcerative colitis have focused mainly on targeting tumour necrosis factor α, a pro-inflammatory cytokine believed to play a pivotal role in the initiation and progression of the disease. - Review Article
Management of cytomegalovirus infection in inflammatory bowel diseases
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 44Issue 7p541–548Published online: April 26, 2012- Sylvie Pillet
- Bruno Pozzetto
- Camille Jarlot
- Stéphane Paul
- Xavier Roblin
Cited in Scopus: 53Cytomegalovirus is a deoxyribonucleic acid virus that infects a large part of the human population; after primary infection, it develops a latent state and can be reactivated, notably after a decrease in host immune defences. In patients with inflammatory bowel diseases, cytomegalovirus is frequently involved, either as an agent of colitis or through local asymptomatic reactivation. Due to the immune context of inflammatory bowel diseases and to the immunosuppressive therapies that are used to treat them, cytomegalovirus entertains complex relationships with these diseases. - Review Article
Diagnostic value and clinical utility of contrast enhanced ultrasound in intestinal diseases
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 42Issue 10p667–674Published online: July 5, 2010- Barbara Braden
- Andre Ignee
- Michael Hocke
- Rebecca M. Palmer
- Christoph Dietrich
Cited in Scopus: 26Contrast enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) has recently gained increasing attention as it clearly improves the visualisation of perfusion in various tissues. The development of second generation contrast enhancing agents used in low-mechanical-index harmonic ultrasound has enabled real-time assessment of the microvascular circulation and quantification of bowel wall vascularity. For this review Medline was searched for clinical studies using CEUS to investigate the gastrointestinal tract. Many studies demonstrate that acute or chronic inflammation of the intestinal wall is accompanied by increased perfusion of the mesentery, which can be displayed semi-quantitatively using contrast enhanced ultrasound analyzing time intensity curves. - Review
Transglutaminases in inflammation and fibrosis of the gastrointestinal tract and the liver
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 41Issue 8p541–550Published online: February 5, 2009- L. Elli
- C.M. Bergamini
- M.T. Bardella
- D. Schuppan
Cited in Scopus: 74Transglutaminases are a family of eight currently known calcium-dependent enzymes that catalyze the cross-linking or deamidation of proteins. They are involved in important biological processes such as wound healing, tissue repair, fibrogenesis, apoptosis, inflammation and cell-cycle control. Therefore, they play important roles in the pathomechanisms of autoimmune, inflammatory and degenerative diseases, many of which affect the gastrointestinal system. Transglutaminase 2 is prominent, since it is central to the pathogenesis of celiac disease, and modulates inflammation and fibrosis in inflammatory bowel and chronic liver diseases. - Clinical Review
Questions and answers on the role of faecal calprotectin as a biological marker in inflammatory bowel disease
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 41Issue 1p56–66Published online: July 4, 2008- J.P. Gisbert
- A.G. McNicholl
Cited in Scopus: 192Faecal calprotectin has been proposed as a non-invasive surrogate marker of intestinal inflammation in inflammatory bowel disease. Close correlation between faecal calprotectin concentration and faecal leukocyte excretion quantified with 111indium has been described. This faecal marker can be detected using simple and cheap techniques. Faecal calprotectin has a good diagnostic precision for separating organic and functional intestinal diseases. However, the specificity for the diagnosis of inflammatory bowel disease is lower than desirable, as several diseases other than inflammatory bowel disease – specially colorectal neoplasia and gastrointestinal infection – can also increase faecal calprotectin.