Background and aim: This study aims to evaluate the effect of time to Crohn's disease (CD) diagnosis on perianal fistula (PAF) outcomes in patients with a fistula as first manifesting sign.
Methods: In this multicenter, retrospective study, CD patients with a PAF preceding CD diagnosis between November 2015 and June 2022 were included. The primary outcome parameter was the time to CD diagnosis and its correlation with long-term outcomes.
Results: In total, 126 patients with a PAF prior to CD diagnosis were identified. Median time to CD diagnosis was 15.0 months (IQR 3.8-47.3). A total of 49 patients (38.9%) had a clinically closed fistula of which 21 patients (42.9%) achieved radiological healing. 25 patients (19.8%) underwent defunctioning, of which 9 patients (36.0%) needed proctectomy. Median time to CD diagnosis was shortest in patients with radiological healing (4.0 months, IQR 2.0-16.5) or clinical closure without radiological healing (11.0 months, IQR 3.0-47.8). In patients without fistula closure (n=51), median time to CD diagnosis was significantly longer compared to patients with fistula closure, 18.0 months vs 8.0 months (p=0.031). In patients who needed defunctioning, median time to diagnosis was more than twice as long compared to patients without defunctioning, 30.0 months vs 12.0 months (p=0.054).
Conclusion: A prolonged time to CD diagnosis in patients with a PAF as a manifesting sign is associated with worse long-term outcomes. Patients in whom radiological healing could be achieved had the shortest time to CD diagnosis, emphasizing the relevance of increased clinical awareness of underlying CD in fistula patients.
Keywords: Crohn’s disease; perianal fistula; prolonged time to diagnosis.
© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of European Crohn’s and Colitis Organisation.