# Disease Clearance Reduces the Risk of Adverse Outcomes and Provides Additional Benefit Beyond Individual Clinical, Endoscopic, or Histological Remission in Ulcerative Colitis

**Authors:** Laura Ramos, Raquel de la Barreda, David Nicolás-Pérez, Manuel Hernández-Guerra, Enrique Quintero

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm15020433 · 2026-01-06

## TL;DR

This study shows that achieving full disease clearance in ulcerative colitis patients leads to better long-term outcomes than partial remission.

## Contribution

Demonstrates disease clearance (combined clinical, endoscopic, and histological remission) provides superior protection against flare-ups compared to individual remission types.

## Key findings

- Disease clearance patients had 21.2% negative outcomes vs 59.2% in non-DC patients
- DC patients had significantly lower clinical relapse risk (p=0.001)
- Only DC patients with endoscopic remission had reduced flare risk (21.2% vs 75%)

## Abstract

Background and Aims: Recent advances in Ulcerative Colitis (UC) treatment have the potential to improve clinical outcomes if inflammation is controlled. The emerging concept of “disease clearance” (DC) aims to achieve combined clinical, endoscopic, and histological remission. However, whether DC is associated with better outcomes remains unclear. This study aimed to evaluate the impact of DC on UC patients. Methods: Consecutive UC patients who underwent colonoscopy and had clinical follow-up of at least 18 months were included between September 2012 and December 2017. Clinical condition (Patient-Reported Outcome, PRO), Mayo endoscopic score (MES), and histopathology (Geboes score, GS) were assessed at baseline and every 6 months. Disease clearance (DC) was defined as simultaneous clinical remission (PRO2 = 0), endoscopic remission (MES = 0), and histological remission (GS ≤ 2). Results: A total of 101 UC patients with a median time since diagnosis of 103 ± 102 months were included. At baseline colonoscopy, 52 patients (51.5%) achieved DC. These subjects had a lower rate of negative outcomes than those without DC (21.2% vs. 59.2%, p < 0.001). Kaplan–Meier curves confirmed a lower risk of clinical relapse in DC patients (log-rank, p = 0.001). Among patients with endoscopic remission, only those with DC had a lower risk of negative outcomes (21.2% vs. 75%, p < 0.01). Achieving DC reduced the risk of flare-ups even in patients with clinical remission or histological remission. Conclusions: Achieving DC in UC patients reduces the risk of negative outcomes during follow-up, supporting its inclusion as a key composite treatment goal in UC management.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Ulcerative Colitis (MONDO:0005101)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** UC (MESH:D003093), inflammation (MESH:D007249)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12841946/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12841946