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SteroidsEducational Audio Podcast
Year: 2020
Authors: Gionata Fiorino
Surgery for enteric IBD – does location matter?ECCO'20 Vienna
Year: 2020
Authors: Christianne J. Buskens
Surgery in IBD11th N-ECCO School
Year: 2020
Authors: Michel Adamina
TDM consortiumECCO'20 Vienna
Year: 2020
Authors: Konstantinos Papamichail
The liver in IBD5th H-ECCO IBD Masterclass
Year: 2020
Authors: Francesca Rosini
TofacitinibEducational Audio Podcast
Year: 2020
Authors: Konstantinos Karmiris
Transatlantic Talking Heads: Exclusive Enteral Nutrition for Paediatric IBDTransatlantic Talking Heads
Year: 2020
Authors: Traci Jester, Arie Levine, Lindsey Albenberg
Transatlantic Talking Heads: Opioids and Pain Management Transatlantic Talking Heads
Year: 2020
Authors: James Lindsay, David Rubin, Jane Andrews
UC Management11th N-ECCO School
Year: 2020
Authors: Mark Samaan
Ulcerative Colitis or Crohn’s Disease? The pathologist’s contribution5th H-ECCO IBD Masterclass
Year: 2020
Authors: Monika Tripathi
Unusual patterns of IBD5th H-ECCO IBD Masterclass
Year: 2020
Authors: Roger Feakins
Upper GI pathology in IBD – when is it really IBD?5th H-ECCO IBD Masterclass
Year: 2020
Authors: Monika Tripathi
UR-CAREECCO'20 Vienna
Year: 2020
Authors: Filip J. Baert
Very early onset IBD and the differential diagnosis of paediatric IBD5th H-ECCO IBD Masterclass
Year: 2020
Authors: Paula Borralho Nunes
Video capsule endoscopy or enteroscopy to assess small bowel Crohn’s disease: which comes first?2nd ECCO-ESGAR Basic Imaging Workshop
Year: 2020
Authors: Reena Sidhu
When IUS, when MRI in daily IBD practice? (Tandem talk)2nd ECCO-ESGAR Basic Imaging Workshop
Year: 2020
Authors: Francesca Maccioni, Kerri Novak
Y-ECCO Literature Review: Addition of azathioprine to the switch of anti-TNF in patients with IBD in clinical relapse with undetectable anti-TNF trough levels and antidrug antibodies: a prospective randomised trialECCO News Issue 1/2020
Year: 2020
Authors: Gregory Sebepos-Rogers

Anti-tumour necrosis factor-α (anti-TNF) has historically been the mainstay of biologic therapy in Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD). However, of those who initially respond to anti-TNF, almost 50% will suffer secondary loss of response (SLR) over subsequent years [1,2]. This SLR is primarily predicated on suboptimal anti-TNF trough levels, with or without detectable anti-drug antibodies (ADAs) [3]. Furthermore the prospective, observational study by Kennedy et al. demonstrated that suboptimal anti-TNF trough levels at week 14 predicted ADAs, low trough levels and worse clinical outcomes [4]. This risk was mitigated for both infliximab and adalimumab by the use of immunomodulators such as azathioprine. This corroborates the retrospective data from other cohorts showing how the addition of an immunomodulator can restore clinical response and favourable pharmacokinetics [5–7]. Remission rates when switching to a second anti-TNF have been shown to be lower when the reason to withdraw the first anti-TNF is SLR as compared to intolerance (45% vs 61%) [8]. In the event that SLR to anti-TNF is due to immunogenicity, a switch to another anti-TNF is associated with a risk of ADA to this new therapy [9,10]. A number of patients will also be on anti-TNF monotherapy at the time of switching having de-escalated from previous combination therapy. We know that open-ended prescription of anti-TNF with azathioprine is not without additional risk, notably infection and lymphoma [11]. Furthermore, de-escalation to anti-TNF monotherapy after a period of combination therapy has been shown in most studies not to impact on relapse rates (49% monotherapy versus 48% combination therapy) [12]. It is in precisely this important group of patients that Roblin et al. sought to compare the use of azathioprine in combination with a second anti-TNF versus this second anti-TNF as monotherapy. Over a follow-up period of 2 years, the rates of clinical and immunogenic failure, and of adverse events, were compared.

Y-ECCO Literature Review: Development and validation of a deep neural network for accurate evaluation of endoscopic images from patients with ulcerative colitisECCO News Issue 4, 2020
Year: 2020
Authors: Toer Stevens

Nowadays, IBD treatment not only targets symptomatic disease control but also aims to heal the intestinal mucosa [1] In Ulcerative Colitis (UC) there is mounting evidence that histological healing of the intestinal mucosa is associated with incremental benefit compared to endoscopic healing alone [2–8]. In a very recent meta-analysis of ten studies including 757 UC patients with complete endoscopic remission (Mayo Score 0 or equivalent) and with a minimum follow-up of >12 months,  patients with histological remission had a 63% lower risk of clinical relapse (RR 0.37, 95% CI 0.24–0.56) than patients with ongoing microscopic inflammation [9]. 

Nevertheless, the adoption of this target remains controversial. Further evaluation is warranted to investigate the ability and cost-effectiveness of achieving this target with the limited number of available treatment options. Furthermore, biopsy procurement and analysis is invasive, costly and time intensive. Finally, a high variability in reported histological disease activity scores is observed when comparing general pathologists with expert gastrointestinal pathologists [10]. These drawbacks limit widespread implementation, in both daily practice and clinical trials. Takenaka et al. address some of these hurdles by employing a deep neural network to enable computer-aided diagnosis of endoscopic and histological remission in patients with UC