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Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) does not seem to make patients any more likely to contract SARS-COV-2 or develop COVID-19, but a rapid review commissioned by the American Gastroenterological Association acknowledges that determination is based on limited evidence and IBD patients should nonetheless maintain remission to reduce their risk of relapse or hospitalization during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The AGA has published a clinical practice update based on that rapid review online in Gastroenterology (2020. doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2020.04.012).
Because of the widespread use of immunosuppressive or immune-modifying drugs, “It is understandable why patients with Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis have specific concerns and potential for increased risk of infection with SARS-CoV-2,” wrote David T. Rubin, MD, AGAF, of the University of Chicago and colleagues in the expert commentary.
They noted that, while association between GI symptoms and COVID-19 RNA in stool samples isn’t clear, given the reports of GI symptoms in COVID-19 patients – ranging from 10% (JAMA. 2020:323:1061-9) to half of patients (Am J Gastroenterol. 2020;115:766-73) – “the clinical implications of this are quite important.” In IBD patients, changes in digestive symptoms without accompanying fever or respiratory symptoms can be monitored for symptoms that could merit testing for the virus as well as “trigger additional treatment adjustments.”
In accordance with the IOIBD (International Organization for the Study of Inflammatory Bowel Disease) consensus, the update noted that IBD patients should continue going to infusion centers for therapies, provided that the centers use a COVID-19 screening protocol.
Patients with IBD who contract COVID-19 seem more likely to be hospitalized for one or the other disease, but that’s based on data from the international SECURE-IBD registry that had 164 patients as of the writing of the update. The update provides guidance for three scenarios for IBD patients during the pandemic:
- Patients not infected with SARS-CoV-2 should maintain their IBD therapies to sustain remission and avoid relapses. “Aside from the obvious negative consequences of a relapse, relapsing IBD will strain available medical resources, may require steroid therapy or necessitate hospitalization, outcomes that are all much worse than the known risks of existing IBD therapies,” Dr. Rubin and colleagues noted.
- Patients who are infected but have no symptoms of COVID-19 should have their dosing of prednisone adjusted to less than 20 mg/day or switched to budesonide; suspend thiopurines, methotrexate, and tofacitinib; and delay dosing of monoclonal antibodies (anti–tumor necrosis factor [anti-TNF] drugs, ustekinumab, or vedolizumab) for 2 weeks while their symptoms for COVID-19 are monitored. “Restarting therapy after 2 weeks if the patient has not developed manifestations of COVID-19 is reasonable,” wrote Dr. Rubin and colleagues. Emerging serial testing should indicate antibody status, but the effectiveness of stool testing for SARS-CoV-2 in these cases “remains to be seen.”
- In the patient with confirmed COVID-19, adjustment of IBD therapy “is appropriate, based on the understanding of the immune activity of the therapy and whether that therapy may worsen outcomes with COVID-19,” the update stated. Therapy adjustment should focus on reducing immune suppression during the active viral infection. Some studies are evaluating anticytokine-based therapies as COVID-19 treatments, so continued anti-TNF therapies might prevent acute respiratory distress syndrome and multiorgan failure, Dr. Rubin and colleagues wrote. “However, in the absence of those data, guidance is currently based on deciding whether to hold or to continue specific IBD therapies.”
The update considers most IBD therapies, specifically aminosalicylates, topical rectal therapy, dietary management, and antibiotics “safe and may be continued,” and oral budesonide can be continued if it’s needed for ongoing IBD control. However, corticosteroids “should be avoided and discontinued quickly.”
Likewise, during the acute stage of COVID-19, thiopurines, methotrexate, and tofacitinib should be discontinued, and anti-TNF drugs and ustekinumab should be stopped during viral illness. Holding vedolizumab during viral illness is also appropriate, according to the update, although the IOIBD group was uncertain if doing so was necessary.
If the IBD patient has digestive symptoms with COVID-19, ongoing supportive care of the COVID-19 is “reasonable,” but investigating the causes of the digestive symptoms “is critically important.” That should include ruling out enteric infections and confirming active inflammation with nonendoscopic testing. Endoscopy should be relegated to only urgent and emergent cases.
Management of IBD in COVID-19 patients also depends on disease severity. Safer therapies are indicated for mild disease, but withholding IBD therapy in moderate to severe cases may not be practical. “In this setting, the risks and benefits of escalating IBD therapy must be carefully weighed against the severity of the COVID-19,” Dr. Rubin and colleagues noted.
In hospitalized patients with severe COVID-19 and poor prognoses, “IBD therapy will likely take a back seat,” the update stated, although COVID-19 therapies should take the concomitant IBD into account. In patients with milder cases of COVID-19, IBD management should focus on acute manifestations, but intravenous steroid therapy shouldn’t exceed 3 days. The update urged providers to submit cases of IBD and confirmed COVID-19 to the SECURE-IBD registry at COVIDIBD.org.
Dr. Rubin disclosed financial relationships with AbbVie, Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Celgene/Syneos, Gilead Sciences, Takeda, and many other pharmaceutical companies. Coauthors disclosed relationships with those companies and Medimmune, Novus Therapeutics, Osiris Therapeutics, RedHill Biopharma, Sanofi-Aventis, UCB Pharma, and multiple other pharmaceutical companies.
SOURCE: Rubin DT, et al. Gastroenterology. 2020: doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2020.04.012
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) does not seem to make patients any more likely to contract SARS-COV-2 or develop COVID-19, but a rapid review commissioned by the American Gastroenterological Association acknowledges that determination is based on limited evidence and IBD patients should nonetheless maintain remission to reduce their risk of relapse or hospitalization during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The AGA has published a clinical practice update based on that rapid review online in Gastroenterology (2020. doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2020.04.012).
Because of the widespread use of immunosuppressive or immune-modifying drugs, “It is understandable why patients with Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis have specific concerns and potential for increased risk of infection with SARS-CoV-2,” wrote David T. Rubin, MD, AGAF, of the University of Chicago and colleagues in the expert commentary.
They noted that, while association between GI symptoms and COVID-19 RNA in stool samples isn’t clear, given the reports of GI symptoms in COVID-19 patients – ranging from 10% (JAMA. 2020:323:1061-9) to half of patients (Am J Gastroenterol. 2020;115:766-73) – “the clinical implications of this are quite important.” In IBD patients, changes in digestive symptoms without accompanying fever or respiratory symptoms can be monitored for symptoms that could merit testing for the virus as well as “trigger additional treatment adjustments.”
In accordance with the IOIBD (International Organization for the Study of Inflammatory Bowel Disease) consensus, the update noted that IBD patients should continue going to infusion centers for therapies, provided that the centers use a COVID-19 screening protocol.
Patients with IBD who contract COVID-19 seem more likely to be hospitalized for one or the other disease, but that’s based on data from the international SECURE-IBD registry that had 164 patients as of the writing of the update. The update provides guidance for three scenarios for IBD patients during the pandemic:
- Patients not infected with SARS-CoV-2 should maintain their IBD therapies to sustain remission and avoid relapses. “Aside from the obvious negative consequences of a relapse, relapsing IBD will strain available medical resources, may require steroid therapy or necessitate hospitalization, outcomes that are all much worse than the known risks of existing IBD therapies,” Dr. Rubin and colleagues noted.
- Patients who are infected but have no symptoms of COVID-19 should have their dosing of prednisone adjusted to less than 20 mg/day or switched to budesonide; suspend thiopurines, methotrexate, and tofacitinib; and delay dosing of monoclonal antibodies (anti–tumor necrosis factor [anti-TNF] drugs, ustekinumab, or vedolizumab) for 2 weeks while their symptoms for COVID-19 are monitored. “Restarting therapy after 2 weeks if the patient has not developed manifestations of COVID-19 is reasonable,” wrote Dr. Rubin and colleagues. Emerging serial testing should indicate antibody status, but the effectiveness of stool testing for SARS-CoV-2 in these cases “remains to be seen.”
- In the patient with confirmed COVID-19, adjustment of IBD therapy “is appropriate, based on the understanding of the immune activity of the therapy and whether that therapy may worsen outcomes with COVID-19,” the update stated. Therapy adjustment should focus on reducing immune suppression during the active viral infection. Some studies are evaluating anticytokine-based therapies as COVID-19 treatments, so continued anti-TNF therapies might prevent acute respiratory distress syndrome and multiorgan failure, Dr. Rubin and colleagues wrote. “However, in the absence of those data, guidance is currently based on deciding whether to hold or to continue specific IBD therapies.”
The update considers most IBD therapies, specifically aminosalicylates, topical rectal therapy, dietary management, and antibiotics “safe and may be continued,” and oral budesonide can be continued if it’s needed for ongoing IBD control. However, corticosteroids “should be avoided and discontinued quickly.”
Likewise, during the acute stage of COVID-19, thiopurines, methotrexate, and tofacitinib should be discontinued, and anti-TNF drugs and ustekinumab should be stopped during viral illness. Holding vedolizumab during viral illness is also appropriate, according to the update, although the IOIBD group was uncertain if doing so was necessary.
If the IBD patient has digestive symptoms with COVID-19, ongoing supportive care of the COVID-19 is “reasonable,” but investigating the causes of the digestive symptoms “is critically important.” That should include ruling out enteric infections and confirming active inflammation with nonendoscopic testing. Endoscopy should be relegated to only urgent and emergent cases.
Management of IBD in COVID-19 patients also depends on disease severity. Safer therapies are indicated for mild disease, but withholding IBD therapy in moderate to severe cases may not be practical. “In this setting, the risks and benefits of escalating IBD therapy must be carefully weighed against the severity of the COVID-19,” Dr. Rubin and colleagues noted.
In hospitalized patients with severe COVID-19 and poor prognoses, “IBD therapy will likely take a back seat,” the update stated, although COVID-19 therapies should take the concomitant IBD into account. In patients with milder cases of COVID-19, IBD management should focus on acute manifestations, but intravenous steroid therapy shouldn’t exceed 3 days. The update urged providers to submit cases of IBD and confirmed COVID-19 to the SECURE-IBD registry at COVIDIBD.org.
Dr. Rubin disclosed financial relationships with AbbVie, Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Celgene/Syneos, Gilead Sciences, Takeda, and many other pharmaceutical companies. Coauthors disclosed relationships with those companies and Medimmune, Novus Therapeutics, Osiris Therapeutics, RedHill Biopharma, Sanofi-Aventis, UCB Pharma, and multiple other pharmaceutical companies.
SOURCE: Rubin DT, et al. Gastroenterology. 2020: doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2020.04.012
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) does not seem to make patients any more likely to contract SARS-COV-2 or develop COVID-19, but a rapid review commissioned by the American Gastroenterological Association acknowledges that determination is based on limited evidence and IBD patients should nonetheless maintain remission to reduce their risk of relapse or hospitalization during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The AGA has published a clinical practice update based on that rapid review online in Gastroenterology (2020. doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2020.04.012).
Because of the widespread use of immunosuppressive or immune-modifying drugs, “It is understandable why patients with Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis have specific concerns and potential for increased risk of infection with SARS-CoV-2,” wrote David T. Rubin, MD, AGAF, of the University of Chicago and colleagues in the expert commentary.
They noted that, while association between GI symptoms and COVID-19 RNA in stool samples isn’t clear, given the reports of GI symptoms in COVID-19 patients – ranging from 10% (JAMA. 2020:323:1061-9) to half of patients (Am J Gastroenterol. 2020;115:766-73) – “the clinical implications of this are quite important.” In IBD patients, changes in digestive symptoms without accompanying fever or respiratory symptoms can be monitored for symptoms that could merit testing for the virus as well as “trigger additional treatment adjustments.”
In accordance with the IOIBD (International Organization for the Study of Inflammatory Bowel Disease) consensus, the update noted that IBD patients should continue going to infusion centers for therapies, provided that the centers use a COVID-19 screening protocol.
Patients with IBD who contract COVID-19 seem more likely to be hospitalized for one or the other disease, but that’s based on data from the international SECURE-IBD registry that had 164 patients as of the writing of the update. The update provides guidance for three scenarios for IBD patients during the pandemic:
- Patients not infected with SARS-CoV-2 should maintain their IBD therapies to sustain remission and avoid relapses. “Aside from the obvious negative consequences of a relapse, relapsing IBD will strain available medical resources, may require steroid therapy or necessitate hospitalization, outcomes that are all much worse than the known risks of existing IBD therapies,” Dr. Rubin and colleagues noted.
- Patients who are infected but have no symptoms of COVID-19 should have their dosing of prednisone adjusted to less than 20 mg/day or switched to budesonide; suspend thiopurines, methotrexate, and tofacitinib; and delay dosing of monoclonal antibodies (anti–tumor necrosis factor [anti-TNF] drugs, ustekinumab, or vedolizumab) for 2 weeks while their symptoms for COVID-19 are monitored. “Restarting therapy after 2 weeks if the patient has not developed manifestations of COVID-19 is reasonable,” wrote Dr. Rubin and colleagues. Emerging serial testing should indicate antibody status, but the effectiveness of stool testing for SARS-CoV-2 in these cases “remains to be seen.”
- In the patient with confirmed COVID-19, adjustment of IBD therapy “is appropriate, based on the understanding of the immune activity of the therapy and whether that therapy may worsen outcomes with COVID-19,” the update stated. Therapy adjustment should focus on reducing immune suppression during the active viral infection. Some studies are evaluating anticytokine-based therapies as COVID-19 treatments, so continued anti-TNF therapies might prevent acute respiratory distress syndrome and multiorgan failure, Dr. Rubin and colleagues wrote. “However, in the absence of those data, guidance is currently based on deciding whether to hold or to continue specific IBD therapies.”
The update considers most IBD therapies, specifically aminosalicylates, topical rectal therapy, dietary management, and antibiotics “safe and may be continued,” and oral budesonide can be continued if it’s needed for ongoing IBD control. However, corticosteroids “should be avoided and discontinued quickly.”
Likewise, during the acute stage of COVID-19, thiopurines, methotrexate, and tofacitinib should be discontinued, and anti-TNF drugs and ustekinumab should be stopped during viral illness. Holding vedolizumab during viral illness is also appropriate, according to the update, although the IOIBD group was uncertain if doing so was necessary.
If the IBD patient has digestive symptoms with COVID-19, ongoing supportive care of the COVID-19 is “reasonable,” but investigating the causes of the digestive symptoms “is critically important.” That should include ruling out enteric infections and confirming active inflammation with nonendoscopic testing. Endoscopy should be relegated to only urgent and emergent cases.
Management of IBD in COVID-19 patients also depends on disease severity. Safer therapies are indicated for mild disease, but withholding IBD therapy in moderate to severe cases may not be practical. “In this setting, the risks and benefits of escalating IBD therapy must be carefully weighed against the severity of the COVID-19,” Dr. Rubin and colleagues noted.
In hospitalized patients with severe COVID-19 and poor prognoses, “IBD therapy will likely take a back seat,” the update stated, although COVID-19 therapies should take the concomitant IBD into account. In patients with milder cases of COVID-19, IBD management should focus on acute manifestations, but intravenous steroid therapy shouldn’t exceed 3 days. The update urged providers to submit cases of IBD and confirmed COVID-19 to the SECURE-IBD registry at COVIDIBD.org.
Dr. Rubin disclosed financial relationships with AbbVie, Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Celgene/Syneos, Gilead Sciences, Takeda, and many other pharmaceutical companies. Coauthors disclosed relationships with those companies and Medimmune, Novus Therapeutics, Osiris Therapeutics, RedHill Biopharma, Sanofi-Aventis, UCB Pharma, and multiple other pharmaceutical companies.
SOURCE: Rubin DT, et al. Gastroenterology. 2020: doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2020.04.012
FROM GASTROENTEROLOGY