Antibiotics for induction and maintenance of remission in Crohn's disease

Feb 8, 2019The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Using antibiotics to start and keep Crohn's disease in remission

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Abstract

Thirteen randomized controlled trials involving 1,303 participants assessed the efficacy and safety of antibiotics in Crohn's disease.

  • Pooling data from trials showed that 55% of antibiotic participants failed to achieve remission at 6 to 10 weeks, compared to 64% of placebo participants.
  • At 10 to 14 weeks, 41% of antibiotic participants failed to achieve a clinical response, while 49% of placebo participants did.
  • Forty-five percent of antibiotic participants relapsed at 52 weeks compared to 57% of placebo participants, but this finding is based on low certainty evidence.
  • Antibiotics do not appear to increase the risk of adverse events, with 38% of antibiotic participants experiencing at least one adverse event compared to 45% of placebo participants.
  • Moderate to high quality evidence suggests that any benefits of antibiotics in active Crohn's disease may be modest and not clinically meaningful.

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Full Text

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