TY - JOUR
T1 - Intestinal Ultrasound for the Pediatric Gastroenterologist
T2 - A Guide for Inflammatory Bowel Disease Monitoring in Children: Expert Consensus on Behalf of the International Bowel Ultrasound Group (IBUS) Pediatric Committee
AU - Kellar, Amelia
AU - Dolinger, Michael
AU - Novak, Kerri L.
AU - Chavannes, Mallory
AU - Dubinsky, Marla
AU - Huynh, Hien
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Lippincott Williams and Wilkins. All rights reserved.
PY - 2023/2/1
Y1 - 2023/2/1
N2 - Crohn disease and ulcerative colitis are chronic inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) often diagnosed in childhood. A strict monitoring strategy can potentially alter the disease course and facilitate early effective treatment before irreversible bowel damage occurs. Serial colonoscopy in children, the gold standard for monitoring, is impractical. Accurate, real-Time, noninvasive markers of disease activity are needed. Intestinal ultrasound is an accurate, noninvasive, real-Time, point-of-care, cross-sectional imaging tool used to monitor inflammation in pediatric IBD patients in Europe, Canada, and Australia. It is now emerging in a few expert centers in the United States as a safe, non-radiating, inexpensive, bedside tool used by the treating gastroenterologist for real-Time decision-making. Unlike the standard biomarkers of pediatric IBD activity, C-reactive protein, and fecal calprotectin, intestinal ultrasound (IUS) facilitates disease localization, characterizes severity, extent, and accurately detects complications. Perhaps most importantly, IUS may enhance shared understanding and ease the burden of treatment decision-making for both the gastroenterologist and the patient. There is a lack of standardization for bedside IUS among pediatric gastroenterologists. The purpose is to outline a standardized approach to pediatric bedside IUS, including basic equipment requirements and technique, patient selection, preparation and positioning, technical considerations and limitations, documentation of mesenteric and luminal features of IBD, characterization of penetrating disease and strictures, and provide a proposed pediatric IUS monitoring algorithm to guide care.
AB - Crohn disease and ulcerative colitis are chronic inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) often diagnosed in childhood. A strict monitoring strategy can potentially alter the disease course and facilitate early effective treatment before irreversible bowel damage occurs. Serial colonoscopy in children, the gold standard for monitoring, is impractical. Accurate, real-Time, noninvasive markers of disease activity are needed. Intestinal ultrasound is an accurate, noninvasive, real-Time, point-of-care, cross-sectional imaging tool used to monitor inflammation in pediatric IBD patients in Europe, Canada, and Australia. It is now emerging in a few expert centers in the United States as a safe, non-radiating, inexpensive, bedside tool used by the treating gastroenterologist for real-Time decision-making. Unlike the standard biomarkers of pediatric IBD activity, C-reactive protein, and fecal calprotectin, intestinal ultrasound (IUS) facilitates disease localization, characterizes severity, extent, and accurately detects complications. Perhaps most importantly, IUS may enhance shared understanding and ease the burden of treatment decision-making for both the gastroenterologist and the patient. There is a lack of standardization for bedside IUS among pediatric gastroenterologists. The purpose is to outline a standardized approach to pediatric bedside IUS, including basic equipment requirements and technique, patient selection, preparation and positioning, technical considerations and limitations, documentation of mesenteric and luminal features of IBD, characterization of penetrating disease and strictures, and provide a proposed pediatric IUS monitoring algorithm to guide care.
KW - Inflammatory bowel disease
KW - Intestinal ultrasound
KW - Pediatric
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85147094760&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1097/MPG.0000000000003649
DO - 10.1097/MPG.0000000000003649
M3 - Review article
C2 - 36306530
AN - SCOPUS:85147094760
SN - 0277-2116
VL - 76
SP - 142
EP - 148
JO - Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition
JF - Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition
IS - 2
ER -