"Out of the box" new therapeutic strategies for Crohn´s disease: moving beyond biologics

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Human body with intestines showing with different IBD treatment options around.

Abstract

New treatment options beyond immunosuppression have emerged in recent years for patients with Crohn´s disease (CD), a chronic systemic condition affecting primarily the gut with great impact in the quality of life. The cause of CD is largely unknown, and a curative treatment is not yet available. In addition, despite the growing therapeutic armamentarium in recent years almost half of the patients don´t achieve a sustained response over time. Thus, new therapeutic strategies are urgently needed. In this review, we discuss the current state of promising new “out of the box” possibilities to control chronic inflammation beyond current pharmacological treatments, including: exclusive enteral nutrition, specific diets, cell therapies using T regs, hyperbaric oxygen, fecal microbiota transplantation, phage therapy, helminths, cannabis and vagal nerve stimulation. The exploration of original and novel therapeutic modalities is key to address their potential as main or complementary treatments in selected CD populations in order to increase efficacy, minimize side effects and improve quality of life of patients.

Details
Title
"Out of the box" new therapeutic strategies for Crohn´s disease: moving beyond biologics
Type of Article
Review Article - Concept Article
Diets studied
EEN
SCD
MED
Low-FODMAP
CDED
mSCD
PEN
Date
November 13, 2023
Author(s)
Catalán-Serra I, Ricanek P, Grimstad T.
Publication
Revista Espanola de Enfemerdades Digestivas
Citation

Catalán-Serra I, Ricanek P, Grimstad T. "Out of the box" new therapeutic strategies for Crohn´s disease: moving beyond biologics. Rev Esp Enferm Dig. 2023;115(11):614-634. doi:10.17235/reed.2022.9010/2022

ISSN Number
Volume
Pages

"We need to stay curious and open to study efficiently different possible ways to control mucosal and systemic inflammation in the CD setting. A multidisciplinary approach allowing information exchange with other disciplines, better understanding of the pathophysiology of CD, and a translational team effort between open-minded regular scientists and IBD clinicians should guide the effort in the years to come to improve the quality of life of patients living with CD. "

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