Ulcerative colitis is a chronic inflammatory disease of the colon; as many as 25% of patients with this disease require hospitalization. The goals of hospitalization are to assess disease severity, exclude infection, administer rapidly acting and highly effective medication regimens, and determine response. During the hospitalization, patients should be given venous thromboembolism prophylaxis and monitored for development of toxic megacolon. Patients who do not respond to intravenous corticosteroids should be considered for rescue therapy with infliximab or cyclosporine. Patients who are refractory to medical therapies or who develop toxic megacolon should be evaluated promptly for colectomy. Patients who do respond to medical therapies should be discharged on an appropriate maintenance regimen when they meet discharge criteria. We review practical evidence-based management principles and propose a day-by-day algorithm for managing patients hospitalized for ulcerative colitis.
Our results confirmed the elevations in sialic acid and sialyltransferase levels in OC patients and suggested potential utility of these parameters in prognostication and treatment monitoring of this neoplasm. The alterations in these parameters in circulation were in accordance with the changes in alpha 2-6 sialylated proteins.
Background
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is rising in incidence in young adults, and this observation is currently unexplained. We investigated whether having a personal history of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2D) was a potential risk factor for young‐onset colorectal cancer (YOCRC).
Methods
The South Australian Young Onset (SAYO) CRC study is a series of young adults with CRC below age 55. Ninety unrelated YOCRC cases were recruited to the study. Personal history and detailed family history of T2D were obtained at face‐to‐face interview and confirmed from medical records. Whole exome sequencing was conducted on germline DNA from each CRC case. Controls for personal history studies of T2D were 240 patients with proven clear colonoscopies and no known CRC predispositions.
Results
The median age of YOCRC cases was 44 years (18–54) and of controls was 45 years (18–54), and 53% of both cases and controls were females (P = 0.99). Left‐sided (distal) CRC was seen in 67/89 (75%) of cases. A personal history of T2D was confirmed in 17/90 (19%) YOCRC patients compared with controls (12/240, 5%; P < 0.001; odds ratio = 4.4; 95% confidence interval, 2.0–9.7). YOCRC patients frequently reported at least one first‐degree relative with T2D (32/85, 38%). Ten of 87 (12%) of YOCRC cases had CRC‐related pathogenic germline variants, however, no pathogenic variants in familial diabetes‐associated genes were seen.
Conclusions
Though the mechanism remains unclear, our observations suggest that there is enrichment for personal history of T2D in YOCRC patients.
Impact
A diagnosis of T2D could therefore potentially identify a subset of young adults at increased risk for CRC and in whom early screening might be appropriate.
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