Antibiotic Effect on Clinical Response and Remission in Pediatric Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Caeley Dye, Caroline M. Sierra, Khaled Bahjri, Mallory Cohen, Gautam Nagendra

TL;DR
This study examines how antibiotics affect treatment outcomes in children with inflammatory bowel disease flares, finding no significant differences in clinical response times across treatment groups.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the potential role of combination antibiotic therapy in accelerating clinical response in pediatric IBD.
Findings
Combination antibiotic therapy showed the fastest time to clinical response compared to other groups.
No significant differences were found in remission or failure rates across treatment groups.
The study suggests further research is needed to clarify the role of antibiotics in pediatric IBD management.
Abstract
Objective: Gut dysbiosis has been implicated in the pathology of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). There is some evidence to suggest that the use of antibiotic treatment can incite an early clinical response or remission when used in conjunction with standard-of-care (SOC) therapy to treat IBD-related flares. Furthermore, antibiotics have been historically investigated for use as a bridge when initiating biologic therapy while waiting for peak biologic treatment effect to occur. This study investigated and compared the time to clinical response when treated with combination antibiotics, metronidazole monotherapy, or SOC therapy in pediatric patients with an active IBD flare. Methods: This study was a retrospective, Institution Review Board-approved, single-centered cohort study which included patients who were less than 18 years of age with a confirmed diagnosis of IBD who received…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInflammatory Bowel Disease · Microscopic Colitis · Clostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens research
