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Inicio Gastroenterología y Hepatología (English Edition) Year 1994: Corticosteroid resistance and dependence among patients with Crohn...
Journal Information
Vol. 43. Issue 7.
Pages 377-378 (August - September 2020)
Vol. 43. Issue 7.
Pages 377-378 (August - September 2020)
Chronography of Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Open Access
Year 1994: Corticosteroid resistance and dependence among patients with Crohn's disease
Año 1994: resistencia y dependencia de los esteroides en pacientes con Crohn
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Ignacio Marín-Jiméneza, Fernando Gomollónb,c,d,
Corresponding author
fgomollon@gmail.com

Corresponding author.
a Unidad de Enfermedad Inflamatoria Intestinal, Servicio de Aparato Digestivo, Hospital Gregorio Marañón, Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria Gregorio Marañón (IiSGM), Madrid, Spain
b Unidad de Enfermedad Inflamatoria Intestinal, Servicio de Aparato Digestivo, Hospital Clínico Universitario Lozano Blesa, Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria Aragón (IIS Aragón), Zaragoza, Spain
c Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red en el Área temática de Enfermedades Hepáticas (CIBEREHD), Madrid, Spain
d Departamento de Medicina, Universidad de Zaragoza, Zaragoza, Spain
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After the efficacy of systemic corticosteroids in the management of patients with ulcerative colitis was demonstrated in the 1950s (see infographic page 367), their use became widespread for treating patients with IBD. It is quite likely that corticosteroids have the honour of being the treatment that have saved the most lives in patients with IBD, but also that have affected more lives negatively due to improper use for long periods of time. In the paper we discuss now, the group coordinated by Dr Pia Munkholm of Copenhagen University Hospital describes response and clinical evolution in just over 100 patients with Crohn's disease (30 days after starting treatment and 30 days after stopping treatment) after the first cycle of systemic corticosteroids that the patients receive. The results shed light on groups of patients with potential greater difficulty in clinical management, either due to their lack of primary response to corticosteroids (20%) or relapse after discontinuation (36%), defined as steroid-dependent. In summary, just 44% of patients with Crohn's disease respond to conventional corticosteroids and maintain the response, but the rest either do not reach remission or relapse upon withdrawal of steroid treatment. We thus have two groups of patients (steroid-refractive and steroid-dependent) that are highly complex, for whom we must seek alternative treatments to achieve steroid-free remission, something that is an undeniable clinical objective today.

Please cite this article as: Marín-Jiménez I, Gomollón F. Año 1994: resistencia y dependencia de los esteroides en pacientes con Crohn. Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2020;43:377–378.

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