Treatment Overview
The main treatment for
Crohn's disease is medicine to stop the inflammation
in the intestine and medicine to prevent flare-ups and keep you in
remission. A few people have severe, persistent
symptoms or complications that may require a stronger medicine, a combination
of medicines, or surgery. The type of symptoms you have and how bad they are
will determine the treatment you need.
Initial treatment
Your doctor will most likely
start with the traditional first-line treatment for Crohn's disease. He or she
will then add or change medicines if you are not getting better.
Mild symptoms may respond to an
antidiarrheal medicine such as loperamide (Imodium
A-D, for example), which slows or stops the painful spasms in your intestines
that cause symptoms.
For mild to moderate
symptoms, your doctor will probably have you take:
- Aminosalicylates (such as sulfasalazine
or mesalamine). These medicines help manage symptoms for many people who have
Crohn's disease.
- Antibiotics such as
ciprofloxacin and
metronidazole may be tried if aminosalicylates are not
helping your symptoms. These medicines work especially well for disease in the
colon. Antibiotics are also used to treat
fistulas, which are abnormal connections or openings
between two organs or parts of the body. But 50% of fistulas come back when
antibiotics are stopped.2
- Corticosteroids (such as budesonide or prednisone) may
be given by mouth for a few weeks or months to control inflammation. But
corticosteroids have serious side effects, such as high blood pressure,
osteoporosis, and increased risk of infection.
- Budesonide causes remission in mild or
moderate Crohn's disease of the ileum and the right colon. It does not work as
well as prednisone or other corticosteroids. But it also does not have as many
side effects as other corticosteroids. The long-term side effects are not well
known, so your doctor will probably not have you take it for a long
time.
- Prednisone may help if budesonide does not.
- Medicines that suppress the
immune system (called
immunomodulator medicines), such as azathioprine
(AZA), 6-mercaptopurine (6-MP), or methotrexate. You may take these if the
medicines listed above do not work, if your symptoms come back when you stop
taking corticosteroids, or if your symptoms come back often, even with
treatment.
If you have tried all the medicines listed above and none
of them have worked, your doctor may give you a
tumor
necrosis factor (TNF) antagonist such as infliximab (Remicade). This
drug may work for people who have not had any success with other medicines for
Crohn's disease. Infliximab is also used to treat fistulas if antibiotics do
not heal them. Another TNF antagonist that may be used to treat Crohn's disease
is adalimumab (Humira). It may work for people for whom infliximab has stopped
working and for people who have a bad reaction to infliximab.
Severe symptoms may be treated with
corticosteroids given through a vein (intravenous, IV) or TNF antagonists. With
severe symptoms, the first step is to control the disease. When your symptoms
are gone, your doctor will probably have you start taking one of the medicines
listed above to keep you symptom-free (in remission).
Ongoing treatment
Ongoing treatment is designed to
find a medicine or combination of medicines that keeps Crohn's disease in
remission.
If aminosalicylates (such as sulfasalazine or
mesalamine) or immune system suppressors (such as azathioprine [AZA],
6-mercaptopurine [6-MP], or methotrexate) keep your disease in remission, you
will continue taking the medicines. Your health professional will want to see
you about every 6 months if your condition is stable or more frequently if you
have flare-ups. You may have laboratory tests every 2 to 3 months.
Corticosteroids (such as budesonide, hydrocortisone, or prednisone) may
be given to stop inflammation if you have flare-ups of symptoms. If you need to
take corticosteroids for an extended time, you also may receive calcium,
vitamin D, and prescription medicine to prevent
osteoporosis.
Tumor necrosis factor (TNF)
antagonists such as infliximab (Remicade) and adalimumab (Humira) are also used
as maintenance medicines.
Treatment if the condition gets worse
If you have
severe
Crohn's disease, you will most likely be given
infliximab (Remicade). This drug may be prescribed if Crohn's disease does not
get better with medicines that suppress the immune system (such as azathioprine
[AZA], 6-mercaptopurine [6-MP], or methotrexate). Infliximab may also be given
if your symptoms come back when you try to stop taking corticosteroids.
Infliximab is given in a vein (intravenous, IV).
If infliximab
does not work for you, or if you cannot take it because of a serious side
effect, you may be given adalimumab (Humira). Adalimumab is given as a shot
under the skin (subcutaneous).
If you have a very bad flare-up of
Crohn's disease, you will most likely need IV corticosteroids (like
hydrocortisone) to get the disease under control.
Some severe
cases of Crohn's disease need to be treated in the hospital where you would
receive
supplemental nutrition through a tube placed in your
nose and down into the stomach (enteral nutrition). In other cases, the bowel
may need to rest, and you will be fed liquid nutrients in a vein (total
parenteral nutrition, TPN). Supplemental nutrition may be necessary if you are
malnourished because of severe Crohn's disease in the small intestine.
Nutritional support is especially important for children who are not growing
normally because of severe disease.
Surgery may be needed if no
medicine is effective, you have serious side effects from medicine, your
symptoms can be controlled only with long-term use of corticosteroids, or you
develop complications such as fistulas, abscesses, or bowel obstructions.
Surgery involves removing the affected portion of the intestines, preserving as
much of the intestines as possible to maintain normal function. Unfortunately,
Crohn's disease tends to return to other areas of the intestines after
surgery.