AI Article Synopsis

  • * He received steroids for remission and adalimumab for maintenance therapy, which initially closed the fistula and showed a positive clinical outcome.
  • * After a relapse and the development of a subcutaneous abscess, his treatment was adjusted to infliximab with steroids, resulting in no further relapses, highlighting the lack of established treatment strategies for this condition.

Article Abstract

A 55-year-old man presented with recurrent ulcers and an enterocutaneous fistula at the anastomotic site after surgery for an ileovesical fistula and was diagnosed with intestinal Behçet's disease after undergoing surgery for enterocutaneous fistulae twice. The patient was transferred to our hospital because of recurrent enterocutaneous fistulae. He had a history of recurrent oral aphthous ulcers, folliculitis, and epididymitis and met the diagnostic/classification criteria for incomplete Behçet's disease and thus was diagnosed as having intestinal Behçet's disease. Remission induction therapy with steroids was administered for an ileal ulcer and an enterocutaneous fistula, and adalimumab was initiated for maintenance therapy. The fistula was closed, and the clinical course was favorable. Two months after initiating adalimumab, a subcutaneous abscess was detected at the site of the enterocutaneous fistula scar, and relapse of intestinal Behçet's disease was suspected. Steroids were re-administered for remission induction, followed by maintenance therapy, for which adalimumab was switched to infliximab. No relapse was detected after steroid withdrawal. No therapeutic strategies have been established for intestinal Behçet's disease. Moreover, there have been very few reports on therapeutic strategies and postoperative maintenance therapy for enterocutaneous fistulae. We thus consider this case valuable.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8818548PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/BTT.S348300DOI Listing

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