PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

First comprehensive medical guideline on management of pouchitis released

American Gastroenterological Association also outlines definitions of inflammatory pouch disorders experienced by people with ulcerative colitis

2023-12-19
(Press-News.org) Bethesda, MD (Dec. 19, 2023) — The American Gastroenterological Association (AGA) has released the first comprehensive evidence-based guideline on the management of pouchitis, the most common complication people with ulcerative colitis experience following surgery to remove their colon.  

Between 150,000 and 300,000 people with ulcerative colitis in the U.S. live with a surgically created internal reservoir or “pouch” created from their small intestine as an alternate way to store and pass stool after their diseased colon is removed. The pouch can become inflamed, a condition called pouchitis, which affects almost half of patients within two years of surgery and up to 80% of patients over time.  

“As providers we struggle to get insurance approval for medications to treat pouchitis, because it has not been a well-defined or recognized entity. Our intention with this guideline is to help improve access for patients and providers to use these advanced therapies,” said guideline author Siddharth Singh, MD, MS, University of California, San Diego. 

AGA provides the following guidance for physicians caring for patients with ulcerative colitis who undergo proctocolectomy with ileal pouch-anal anastomosis, also known as IPAA or J-pouch. 

AGA suggests initial treatment of pouchitis with antibiotics. 

Treatment with multi-strain probiotics following an antibiotic course is suggested for preventing recurrent pouchitis. 

AGA suggests cyclical or near continuous antibiotic therapy to treat pouchitis that responds to antibiotics but recurs frequently and shortly after antibiotics are discontinued. 

In patients with recurrent pouchitis that doesn’t respond to antibiotics or Crohn’s-like disease of the pouch, AGA suggests advanced immunosuppressive medications (ie. Infliximab, vedolizumab, ustekinumab, upadacitinib, etc.) 

Pouchitis has a significant impact on patients’ quality of life, so there is interest in ways to prevent it from occurring. The AGA guideline suggests against use of antibiotics for primary prevention of pouchitis, and guideline authors did not find enough scientific evidence to recommend for or against the use of probiotics for prevention.  

AGA outlines four types of inflammatory pouch disorders 

Intermittent pouchitis 

This happens when a patient experiences infrequent episodes of pouchitis symptoms that get better with treatment.  Chronic antibiotic-dependent pouchitis 

This occurs when a patient’s pouchitis responds to antibiotics, but symptoms quickly return after antibiotics are stopped (typically within days to weeks). 

Chronic antibiotic-refractory pouchitis 

This occurs when patients experience continuous symptoms of pouchitis that don’t get better with antibiotic therapy. Patients usually require more advanced treatment such as steroids or immunosuppressive medication.  

Crohn’s-like disease of the pouch 

Patients may have issues like fistulas (abnormal passages), strictures (narrowing) and inflammation in the small intestine above the pouch.  

Amber Tresca, a patient advocate who has been living with a J-pouch for over 20 years shares that, “it’s important for patients to know how to care for their pouch if they develop pouchitis, especially if they don’t have access to a healthcare provider that is a pouch specialist. This guideline can help patients understand that pouchitis is a real condition, there is treatment for it, and that they don’t have to live with symptoms.” 

###

Media contact: Mara Shapiro, media@gastro.org 

About the AGA Institute 

The American Gastroenterological Association is the trusted voice of the GI community. Founded in 1897, the AGA has grown to more than 16,000 members from around the globe who are involved in all aspects of the science, practice and advancement of gastroenterology. The AGA Institute administers the practice, research and educational programs of the organization. www.gastro.org. 
 
About Gastroenterology 

Gastroenterology is the most prominent journal in the field of gastrointestinal disease. As the official journal of the AGA Institute, Gastroenterology delivers up-to-date and authoritative coverage of both basic and clinical gastroenterology. Regular features include articles by leading authorities and reports on the latest treatments for diseases. Original research is organized by clinical and basic-translational content, as well as by alimentary tract, liver, pancreas, and biliary content. www.gastrojournal.org/ 

AGA is now on Instagram. 
Like AGA and Gastroenterology on Facebook. 
Follow us on Twitter @AmerGastroAssn and @AGA_Gastro. 
Check out our videos on YouTube. 
Follow AGA on LinkedIn. 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

A neuromuscular model for drug development

A neuromuscular model for drug development
2023-12-19
Scientists have so far identified around 800 different neuromuscular diseases. These conditions are caused by problems in the way muscle cells, motor neurons and peripheral cells interact. These disorders, including amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and spinal muscular atrophy, lead to muscle weakness, paralysis, and in some cases death. “These diseases are highly complex, and the causes of the dysfunction can vary widely,” says Dr. Mina Gouti, head of the Stem Cell Modeling of Development and Disease Lab at the Max Delbrück Center. The problem might lie with the neurons, the muscle cells or the connections between the two. ...

Chilean researchers pledge for transformative change to tackle climate action

Chilean researchers pledge for transformative change to tackle climate action
2023-12-19
Addressing climate change has become a central issue in Chile’s public policy. As part of that debate, Dr. Maisa Rojas, researcher in Atmospheric Physics, who currently serves as Chilean Minister for Environment and Marco Billi of the Centre for Climate and Resilience Research, Universidad de Chile, propose a new model of governance at the country level to facilitate the changes needed. The proposal – written before Dr. Rojas’ appointment to the Chilean government – is published in IOP Publishing’s journal Environmental Research Letters.   The model proposed places climate action ...

A new inactive form of p38a protein discovered

A new inactive form of p38a protein discovered
2023-12-19
p38a protein, which is associated with cancer and other diseases, adopts a previously unknown structure regulated by cellular redox conditions. The finding may have implications when designing new drugs to block it. The work developed by IRB Barcelona, ​​in collaboration with the University of Barcelona and the company Nostrum Biodiscovery, has been published in the journal Nature Communications. Barcelona, 19 December 2023 - p38a protein, a key enzyme in the regulation of various cellular functions, plays a crucial ...

Childhood trauma increases risk of chronic pain in adulthood, research to-date highlights

2023-12-19
Physical, sexual, or emotional abuse, or neglect, either alone or combined with other types of childhood trauma, increases the risk of chronic pain and related disability in adulthood, according to new research.    These new findings underscore the urgency of addressing adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) – potentially traumatic events that occur before 18 years of age – and taking steps to mitigate their long-term impact on people’s health.    The study ...

Pandas active posters on social media

Pandas active posters on social media
2023-12-19
Pandas, long portrayed as solitary beasts, do hang with family and friends – and they’re big users of social media. Scent-marking trees serve as a panda version of Facebook. An article in the international journal Ursus paints a new lifestyle picture of the beloved bears in China’s Wolong Nature Reserve, a life that’s shielded from human eyes because they’re shy, rare, and live in densely forested, remote areas. No one really knows how pandas hang, but a new study indicates pandas are around others ...

Air pollutants commonly found indoors could have an impact on creativity, NTU Singapore scientists find

Air pollutants commonly found indoors could have an impact on creativity, NTU Singapore scientists find
2023-12-19
Air quality in the office may affect our level of creativity at work, scientists at Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore) have found. Working with the global air filter manufacturer Camfil on a shared research project, the NTU Singapore scientists found in a study that high levels of volatile organic compounds – gases released from products such as detergents, pesticides, perfumes, aerosol sprays and paint – affected the study participants’ creativity when they were asked to build 3D models with LEGO bricks. Using a statistical analysis, the NTU team estimated that reducing total ...

Lexical simplification via single-word generation

2023-12-19
Lexical simplification (LS) aims to simplify a sentence by replacing complex words with simpler words without changing the meaning of the sentence,which can facilitate comprehension of the text for people with non-native speakers and children. Traditional LS methods utilize linguistic databases or word embedding models to extract synonyms or high-similar words for the complex word, and then sort them based on their appropriateness in context. Recently, BERT-based LS methods entirely or partially mask ...

Single-celled protists in the guts of animals thrive without the ‘powerhouse of the cell’

Single-celled protists in the guts of animals thrive without the ‘powerhouse of the cell’
2023-12-19
Almost all eukaryotic organisms, from plants and animals to fungi, can’t survive without mitochondria – the “powerhouses of the cell,” which generate chemical energy using oxygen. However, a new study by Lukáš Novák and Vladimír Hampl of Charles University, published in the journal PLOS Genetics, finds that multiple members of the oxymonads, a group of single-celled protists that live inside the guts of termites and other animals, have evolved to live quite happily without them. Many groups of protists have evolved simplified mitochondria, but for a long time, scientists ...

Patients’ creative ideas can inform a healthcare organization’s learning and innovation

2023-12-19
December 19, 2023--Routinely collected patient experience surveys provide an opportunity for patients to share their creative ideas for improvement, according to a new study at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health. Researchers in Health Policy and Management developed and assessed a methodological strategy that validates questions designed to elicit creative ideas from patients. Until now the pace of translating patient insights into innovation has been slow and its effectiveness inadequate.  The findings are ...

SLAC and its partners release a free, easy-to-use platform for understanding and managing electric grids

2023-12-19
The Department of Energy’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory and its partners at Hitachi America Energy Solutions Laboratory have released a new open-source software platform for simulating how all the parts of an electric grid work together, along with a graphic interface that makes it much easier for users to understand and apply the results.  Together, these two tools can help utilities harden their distribution systems against extreme weather and wildfires, integrate renewable energy sources like wind and solar into electric grids and set the rates they charge customers, among other things.  The grid ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Nature and plastics inspire breakthrough in soft sustainable materials

New quantum timekeeper packs several clocks into one

Suicidal thoughts and behaviors among autistic transgender or gender-nonconforming US college students

The bright and dark sides of Pacific salmon biotransport

New therapeutic strategy identified for triple negative breast cancer

Scientists create first map of DNA modification in the developing human brain

Extended Timing: How neurons encode information on timescales that match learning

Dual immunotherapy plus chemotherapy benefits specific subset of patients with lung cancer

Scientists discover viral trapdoor blocking HIV and herpes

Study uncovers mutations and DNA structures driving bladder cancer

A matter of taste: Electronic tongue reveals AI inner thoughts

Another step towards decoding smell

Plant Science Research collaboration will explore key mosses critical to storing carbon

Researchers examine the persistence of invisible plastic pollution

Coffee during pregnancy safe for baby’s brain development

SwRI-led instrument aboard Jupiter-bound spacecraft nails in-flight test

New AI models of plasma heating lead to important corrections in computer code used for fusion research

Study: Rise in English learner students in “new destination” states helps, does not hurt, academic outcomes for existing students

LANDFEED project kicks off: Transforming agro-food waste into bio-based fertilizers to support Europe’s circular economy

Mcity opens for remote testing of autonomous vehicle technologies, calls for federal standards

Adding vagus nerve stimulation to training sessions may boost how well sounds are perceived

ACS president comments on award of 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry

Effect of tele-ICU on clinical outcomes of critically ill patients

Restrictive vs liberal transfusion strategy in patients with acute brain injury

Extracorporeal blood purification and acute kidney injury in cardiac surgery

Frequency of screening and spontaneous breathing trial techniques

International collaboration addresses rising cancer rates in South America

The secret to slimming? Special ‘skinny genes’ double weight loss

Study finds persistent infection could explain long COVID in some people

COVID-19 infection appeared to increase risk of heart attack & stroke up to 3 years later

[Press-News.org] First comprehensive medical guideline on management of pouchitis released
American Gastroenterological Association also outlines definitions of inflammatory pouch disorders experienced by people with ulcerative colitis