Incidental Ileitis, IBD Pipeline, & Ustekinumab Followup Data

M Agrawal et al. Journal of Crohn’s and Colitis, jjab030https://doi.org/10.1093/ecco-jcc/jjab030. Prevalence and progression of incidental terminal ileitis on non-diagnostic colonoscopy: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Key findings:

  • Seven studies reported the prevalence of IDTI (Incidentally-diagnosed terminal ileitis) in 44,398 persons undergoing non-diagnostic colonoscopy
  • The pooled prevalence rate of IDTI was 1.6%
  • Progression to overt CD was rare over 1-7 years of followup

My take: As noted below by Dr. Rubin, in those with normal labs who are asymptomatic, most incidental ileitis is not progressive and should be monitored.

This slide from @RealCecum Twitter Feed and @IBDMD Twitter Feed

Incidental Brain Imaging Findings

A recent study (PR Jansen et al. NEJM 2017; 377: 1593-5) provides some useful insight into the issue of incidental findings with pediatric brain MRIs.  Between 2013-2015, the authors examined 3966 children (mean age 10.1 years) prospectively in an effort to identify influences on development. Key findings:

  • At least one incidental finding was present in 25.6%
  • Most commonly: Pineal gland cysts 16.8% of cohort, Arachnoid cysts 2.17%, Venous anomalies 1.59%, Chiari I malformations 0.63%, subependymal heterotopia 0.48%, partial agenesis of the corpus callosum 0.05%
  • 7 children (0.18%) has suspected primary brain tumors; 2 had neurosurgical treatment
  • Imaging findings requiring clinical followup was only 0.43%

A study CT scans in asymptomatic adults, mean age 63 years, (NEJM 2007; 357: 1821) also found a high incidence of abnormalities, including 7.2% with asymptomatic infarcts, 1.8% with aneurysm, and 1.6% with benign tumors.

My take: The frequency of these incidental findings in the pediatric population is surprising to me.  Having anything reported as abnormal on an MRI is likely very unsettling for parents and often for providers due to uncertainty regarding the significance.

Grand Canyon Sunrise and  then to the South Kaibab Trail (below)