Rectal Tacrolimus for Strictures Due to Crohn’s

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Simple water-based tacrolimus enemas for refractory proctitis
Sasha R Fehily et al. JGH Open. 2019.

Abstract
Background and aims: Rectal ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn's disease (CD) often do not respond to conventional therapies. Oral and suppository tacrolimus are effective but often poorly tolerated or are complex to formulate. Tacrolimus is topically active, water soluble, and has minimal systemic toxicity when administered rectally; we therefore tested a simple tap water-based enema formulation.
Methods: Tacrolimus powder from 1 mg capsules and tap water in a 60 mL syringe were delivered rectally. The primary end-point was endoscopic response (UC: MAYO score reduction by one point; CD: improvement in ulcer number and severity). Secondary end-points included endoscopic remission, clinical response, stool frequency, and rectal bleeding.
Results: Seventeen patients [12 UC, five CD, nine female, median age 31 years] with refractory rectal disease were treated. The majority of patients had failed immunosuppressive therapy [88% thiopurine; 71% biologic therapy]. Initial enemas included 1-4 mg tacrolimus daily and 1-3 mg tacrolimus maintenance three times a week for a median of 20 weeks (range 3-204). Concomitant thiopurine or biologic therapy continued. 94% tolerated therapy. Of 12 UC patients, eight (67%) achieved endoscopic remission, one further patient achieved endoscopic response, and median partial MAYO scores decreased (pre:4 vs. post:2; P = 0.010). Of five CD patients, three (60%) achieved endoscopic response, two (40%) endoscopic remission, and three (60%) clinical response. Stool frequency, rectal bleeding, and C-reactive protein levels improved. Strictures became endoscopically passable in all four affected patients. No major adverse events were reported, and four patients had disease flare.
Conclusions: Tacrolimus enemas are easy to prepare, well tolerated, effective, and safe. They should be included in the treatment armamentarium for inflammatory bowel disease-related refractory proctitis.



JGH3-4-561-g001.jpg

Figure 1
Distal end of a rectal stricture, with pinhole lumen, in a patient prior to tacrolimus enema therapy.




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Figure 2
Mild stricture in the same patient after tacrolimus enema therapy.



Fehily SR, Martin FC, Kamm MA. Simple water-based tacrolimus enemas for refractory proctitis. JGH Open. 2019 Nov 14;4(4):561-564. doi: 10.1002/jgh3.12280. PMID: 32782938; PMCID: PMC7411644.
 
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