# Comprehensive Imaging Evaluation and Staging of Crohn’s Disease: When and Why to Use Intestinal Ultrasound, MRE, or CTE: Current Guidelines and Future Directions

**Authors:** Francesca Maccioni, Ludovica Busato, Lorenza Bottino, Alessandro Longhi, Alessandra Valenti, Maddalena Zippi, Carlo Catalano

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics16060882 · 2026-03-16

## TL;DR

This paper reviews the use of intestinal ultrasound, MR enterography, and CT enterography for diagnosing and managing Crohn’s disease, emphasizing their strengths and limitations.

## Contribution

The paper provides a comparative overview of imaging modalities for Crohn’s disease, highlighting their roles in diagnosis, monitoring, and treatment response.

## Key findings

- MR Enterography (MRE) is highlighted as the most comprehensive radiation-free imaging modality for evaluating Crohn’s disease.
- Intestinal Ultrasound (IUS) is effective for tight monitoring and early therapeutic response assessment.
- CT Enterography (CTE) remains essential in acute settings despite radiation concerns due to its speed and accuracy.

## Abstract

Crohn’s disease (CD) is a complex inflammatory bowel disease, defined by chronic transmural inflammation and marked heterogeneity in both anatomical distribution and disease behavior, with potential involvement of any segment of the gastrointestinal tract and multiple phenotypes. Advanced cross-sectional imaging nowadays plays a central role in CD management, reliably assessing both luminal and extraluminal inflammatory manifestations, supporting initial diagnosis, phenotypic characterization, and longitudinal monitoring of disease activity, complications and treatment response. Over the last two decades, Intestinal Ultrasound (IUS), MR Enterography (MRE), and Computed Tomography Enterography (CTE) have become central components of the diagnostic pathway. MRE has emerged as the most comprehensive, radiation-free modality for evaluating intestinal extent, inflammatory activity, and complications in Crohn’s disease. Multiparametric MRE, combining T2-weighted imaging, contrast-enhanced sequences, diffusion-weighted imaging, and cine acquisitions, enables a real “Crohn’s disease staging”, namely a thorough evaluation of the transmural inflammation, of fibrotic and fistulizing lesions in the small and large bowel, as well as in the perianal region. IUS provides a dynamic, widely accessible, safe and repeatable imaging technique that is particularly well suited for tight-monitoring strategies, early assessment of therapeutic response, and routine follow-up, especially in experienced centers. Notably CTE, despite concerns related to cumulative ionizing radiation exposure, remains indispensable in acute clinical settings owing to its rapid acquisition, broad availability, and high diagnostic accuracy for detecting abscesses, perforation, and bowel obstruction. Combined, these three modalities offer a complementary and patient-tailored framework for optimal CD management. This review outlines the pathological complexity of Crohn’s disease, traces the evolution of imaging approaches, and provides a comparative overview highlighting the specific strengths and limitations of each modality.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Crohn’s disease (MONDO:0005011)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** inflammatory bowel disease (MESH:D015212), abscesses (MESH:D000038), CD (MESH:D003424), bowel obstruction (MESH:D012778), inflammation (MESH:D007249)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

8 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13025547/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13025547