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Indications and outcomes of abdominal surgery in patients with Crohn s Disease attending a tertiary hospital: a single centre study

Background: Crohn's disease is a chronic inflammatory and heterogenous condion affecting predominantly the small bowel. Despite optimal medical therapy, it is associated with lifethreatening complications related to inflammation or fibro-stenotic disease that often require surgery. The aim of this s...

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Main Author: Mabobo, Ndumbwe
Other Authors: Setshedi, Mashiko
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: Department of Medicine 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Mabobo, Ndumbwe
author2 Setshedi, Mashiko
author_browse Mabobo, Ndumbwe
Setshedi, Mashiko
author_facet Setshedi, Mashiko
Mabobo, Ndumbwe
author_sort Mabobo, Ndumbwe
collection Thesis
description Background: Crohn's disease is a chronic inflammatory and heterogenous condion affecting predominantly the small bowel. Despite optimal medical therapy, it is associated with lifethreatening complications related to inflammation or fibro-stenotic disease that often require surgery. The aim of this study was to describe the characteristics of a cohort of patients with Crohn's disease requiring abdominal surgery. Methods: This was a retrospective study of adults attending at the colorectal unit of a teaching hospital. Relevant demographic and clinical data were collected from multiple sources from January 2010 to June 2020. Results: Sixty nine patients (4.6%) of the total cohort of IBD patients with Crohn's disease underwent abdominal surgery. The mean age at disease diagnosis was 27.9 ± 13.3 and mean age at time of surgery 43±13.2. Sixty-eight percent were females and 66% smokers. Thirty-three percent and 18.9% had fistulizing and stricturing disease respectively. Pre-operatively, 22% of patients were on steroids, 47% on azathioprine and 10% on biologics. The commonest indication for surgery was small bowel obstruction (37.6%), followed by fistulizing disease (18.8%). Sixty one percent of patients had one surgery, with a quarter needing more than two surgeries in the study period. Post-operative clinical recurrence occurred in 50%. Conclusions: Fifty two percent of patients had penetrating and/or stricturing disease necessitating surgery in a high proportion of patients. The commonest indication was small bowel obstruction. Post-operative recurrence was the commonest complication in half the patients. This data together speaks to the aggressive phenotype of CD in this cohort, and the important role that surgery still plays in the management of CD. A multi-disciplinary team is crucial in the management of these patients.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:46.693Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40325 Indications and outcomes of abdominal surgery in patients with Crohn s Disease attending a tertiary hospital: a single centre study Mabobo, Ndumbwe Setshedi, Mashiko Boutall Adam Medicine Background: Crohn's disease is a chronic inflammatory and heterogenous condion affecting predominantly the small bowel. Despite optimal medical therapy, it is associated with lifethreatening complications related to inflammation or fibro-stenotic disease that often require surgery. The aim of this study was to describe the characteristics of a cohort of patients with Crohn's disease requiring abdominal surgery. Methods: This was a retrospective study of adults attending at the colorectal unit of a teaching hospital. Relevant demographic and clinical data were collected from multiple sources from January 2010 to June 2020. Results: Sixty nine patients (4.6%) of the total cohort of IBD patients with Crohn's disease underwent abdominal surgery. The mean age at disease diagnosis was 27.9 ± 13.3 and mean age at time of surgery 43±13.2. Sixty-eight percent were females and 66% smokers. Thirty-three percent and 18.9% had fistulizing and stricturing disease respectively. Pre-operatively, 22% of patients were on steroids, 47% on azathioprine and 10% on biologics. The commonest indication for surgery was small bowel obstruction (37.6%), followed by fistulizing disease (18.8%). Sixty one percent of patients had one surgery, with a quarter needing more than two surgeries in the study period. Post-operative clinical recurrence occurred in 50%. Conclusions: Fifty two percent of patients had penetrating and/or stricturing disease necessitating surgery in a high proportion of patients. The commonest indication was small bowel obstruction. Post-operative recurrence was the commonest complication in half the patients. This data together speaks to the aggressive phenotype of CD in this cohort, and the important role that surgery still plays in the management of CD. A multi-disciplinary team is crucial in the management of these patients. 2024-07-04T14:00:30Z 2024-07-04T14:00:30Z 2024 2024-07-04T13:06:31Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MMed http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40325 Eng application/pdf Department of Medicine Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle Medicine
Mabobo, Ndumbwe
Indications and outcomes of abdominal surgery in patients with Crohn s Disease attending a tertiary hospital: a single centre study
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Indications and outcomes of abdominal surgery in patients with Crohn s Disease attending a tertiary hospital: a single centre study
title_full Indications and outcomes of abdominal surgery in patients with Crohn s Disease attending a tertiary hospital: a single centre study
title_fullStr Indications and outcomes of abdominal surgery in patients with Crohn s Disease attending a tertiary hospital: a single centre study
title_full_unstemmed Indications and outcomes of abdominal surgery in patients with Crohn s Disease attending a tertiary hospital: a single centre study
title_short Indications and outcomes of abdominal surgery in patients with Crohn s Disease attending a tertiary hospital: a single centre study
title_sort indications and outcomes of abdominal surgery in patients with crohn s disease attending a tertiary hospital a single centre study
topic Medicine
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40325
work_keys_str_mv AT mabobondumbwe indicationsandoutcomesofabdominalsurgeryinpatientswithcrohnsdiseaseattendingatertiaryhospitalasinglecentrestudy