Background: The effects of extra-intestinal cancer on the course of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) are poorly understood.
Aim: To evaluate the impact of cancer and its management on IBD outcomes.
Methods: A total 80 IBD patients (51 Crohn's disease, 29 ulcerative colitis; 33 men, median age at cancer diagnosis 48yrs) diagnosed with extra-intestinal cancer were selected from a prospective database. IBD activity and therapeutic requirements (assessed year-by-year) were compared before and after cancer diagnosis, with a control group of patients without cancer matched for gender, birth date, date of IBD diagnosis and IBD phenotype.
Results: Paired comparisons of the consecutive periods before and after cancer diagnosis did not show significant changes in median (IQR) percentages of years with active disease (27% [0-50] vs. 19% [0-53]), while the proportion of patient-years on any immunosuppressant remained stable (26% vs. 28%). Chemotherapy had no significant effect on IBD activity. Compared to controls, patients with cancer had a similar IBD activity and use of anti-TNF, but less use of immunomodulators (19% vs. 25%, p<0,001) and an increased rate of surgery (4% vs. 2.5%, p<0,05). Individual variations in IBD activity after cancer diagnosis were not significantly different in patients with cancer and their matched controls.
Conclusion: Occurrence of extra-intestinal cancer impacts IBD therapeutic management, with a trend towards less use of immunomodulators and more surgery. In the long-term, cancer diagnoses and treatments do not modify IBD outcomes.
Keywords: Cancer;; Immunomodulators; Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD);; Therapeutic management;.
Copyright © 2014 European Crohn's and Colitis Organisation. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.