Diverticular disease of the colon (DDC) includes a spectrum of conditions from
asymptomatic diverticulosis to symptomatic uncomplicated diverticulosis,
segmental colitis associated with diverticulosis, and acute diverticulitis
without or with complications that may have serious consequences. Clinical and
scientific interest in DDC is increasing because of the rising incidence of all
conditions within the DDC spectrum, a better, although still limited
understanding of the pathogenic mechanisms involved; the increasing
socioeconomic burden; and the new therapeutic options being tested. The goals of
treatment in DDC are symptom and inflammation relief and preventing disease
progression or recurrence. The basis for preventing disease progression remains
a high-fiber diet and physical exercise, although evidence is poor. Other
current strategies do not meet expectations or lack a solid mechanistic
foundation; these strategies include modulation of gut microbiota or dysbiosis
with rifaximin or probiotics, or using mesalazine for low-grade inflammation in
uncomplicated symptomatic diverticulosis. Most acute diverticulitis is
uncomplicated, and the trend is to avoid hospitalization and unnecessary
antibiotic therapy, but patients with comorbidities, sepsis, or immunodeficiency
should receive broad spectrum and appropriate antibiotics. Complicated acute
diverticulitis may require interventional radiology or surgery, although the
best surgical approach (open versus laparoscopic) remains a
matter of discussion. Prevention of acute diverticulitis recurrence remains
undefined, as do therapeutic strategies. Mesalazine with or without probiotics
has failed to prevent diverticulitis recurrence, whereas new studies are needed
to validate preliminary positive results with rifaximin. Surgery is another
option, but the number of acute events cannot guide this indication. We need to
identify risk factors and disease progression or recurrence mechanisms to
implement appropriate preventive strategies.
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