Are my strictures getting worse on Humira?

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May 10, 2012
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I recently started Humira after having a bad time with crohns this year. I have strictures with a thirty year history.

All was wonderful at first. Now the strictures feel worse.

Trying to be an active dad and working so this is driving me totally mad.

Anyone with any advice?
 
Hi buddy,

I had strictures and was put on humira. Eventually the narrowing got too bad and I had to have another resection. I guess one way to look at it is that strictures can be formed by scarring. If you have active Crohn's then the area is ulcerated, if you use humira it can help heal but like all wounds there is scarring formation in the healing process.

2
 
I think surgery will happen one day. Have been told by my GI physician my bowel is so screwed up it will take a very skilled surgeon to do a good job. I have had a load of weird side effects since starting this drug. I have given myself a deadline of sunday to see how things are and to decide whether or not to hand myself into the hospital, assuming things do not get worse quickly.
 
They can get worse because of it.

Increased expression of CTGF in strictured Crohn's fibroblasts underlies its role in fibrosis. TNF-alpha suppresses fibrosis by downregulating fibroblast CTGF expression, an effect that may be lost following anti-TNF-alpha treatment, thereby promoting stricture formation..


http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16838391

There is a lot of debate back and forth about this, in the beginning many doctors refused to prescribe infliximab to people because they saw every time that there were strictures, then they blamed the coritcosteroids, then they blamed the infliximab (humira), etc.

My opinion is yes, infliximab and humira promote stricturing.

I think why some don't get strictures is because they have no prior stricturing, stricturing can keep going and collagen can increase with or without inflammation once you have a stricture, you could "cure" someone of the inflammatory process but the stricture process can still continue due to collagen deposition. But when someone already has a stricture, using infliximab or humira likely makes it worse.

People with a lot of stricturing tend to be also refractory, they do not tend to respond very well to medication, likely because crohn is not always driving the inflammation, but the stricturing is.

It's not easy to determine where the pain or inflammation is coming from with someone with strictures, it could be coming from the inflammation from crohn, or it could be from the stricturing which is promoting inflammation. If it's the later, then medication usually does very little, many people with heavy stricturing are refractory.

Little children getting crohn is often accompanied with stricturing very early on, I wonder sometimes what the cause is, because in adults stricturing is often a very slow progress, and sometimes even partially reverses itself (because of cell renewal), I wonder if it has to do with the pretty agressive therapy they use for children now, many kids are immediately put on humira or infliximab. In the past this wasn't the case, but I also heard far less about stricturing.
 
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