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ASGE guideline: endoscopy in the diagnosis and treatment of inflammatory bowel disease

    • Colonoscopy with ileoscopy should be performed in the evaluation of IBD and for differentiating UC from CD.
    • Mucosal biopsy specimens are important for the diagnosis of IBD and may help differentiate CD from UC.
    • When colonoscopy is contraindicated, or the extent of disease is limited, flexible sigmoidoscopy may provide an adequate diagnosis.
    • EGD or enteroscopy may be helpful for diagnosing IBD when other studies have negative results and for differentiating CD from UC in indeterminate colitis.
    • CE is a less invasive technique for evaluating the small intestine for Crohn’s involvement and has been shown to be more sensitive than radiologic and endoscopic procedures for detecting small bowel lesions.
    • In patients with CD and known or suspected high-grade strictures, CE should not be performed. Small bowel follow-through or CT enterography should be obtained before CE in patients with CD to assess for high-grade strictures.
    • CRC risk is increased in both UC and extensive Crohn’s colitis and surveillance colonoscopy with multiple biopsies should be performed every 1 to 2 years beginning after 8 to 10 years of disease.
    • The finding of dysplasia in flat mucosa, especially if multifocal, is an indication for total colectomy . Colectomy is indicated for colorectal cancer, high-grade dysplasia or low-grade dysplasia (particularly multifocal) in flat mucosa. A dysplastic mass lesion that cannot be removed endoscopically, or is associated with dysplasia elsewhere in the colon, is an indication for total colectomy.
    • Dysplastic polypoid lesions may be managed as sporadic adenomas provided they are completely resected and there is no dysplasia in flat mucosa surrounding the polyp or elsewhere in the colon.
    • EUS is highly accurate for characterizing perianal Crohn’s disease.
    • A colonic stricture in the setting of UC should be considered malignant until proven otherwise. If adequate evaluation cannot be performed, then colectomy isindicated.
    • Chronic benign fibrotic strictures associated with obstructive symptoms may be managed with endoscopic balloon dilation with or without steroid injections.